Talk of The Villages Florida

Talk of The Villages Florida (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/)
-   The Villages, Florida, General Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/)
-   -   Indépendant Voter? (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/indpendant-voter-334134/)

paulajr 08-03-2022 07:31 AM

Yes
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jimmy o (Post 2121967)
What newspaper was this? I did not read that in The Daily Sun, or POA. In any event not true.

It IS true. Please go to elections office webpage to confirm. I am working the polls and have been trained for the upcoming primary.

Villages Kahuna 08-03-2022 07:39 AM

You can register as an Independent, but in primary elections you can only vote for candidates who are not affiliated with either political party.

You can vote for any of the candidates running for office in the General Election in November, of course.

OrangeBlossomBaby 08-03-2022 08:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Villages Kahuna (Post 2121984)
You can register as an Independent, but in primary elections you can only vote for candidates who are not affiliated with either political party.

You can vote for any of the candidates running for office in the General Election in November, of course.

If the candidates are running in one party, and there is no opposition in the other party, then anyone can vote in that singular primary.

In other words - if there is only a Republican primary, and there won't be a Democratic Primary in that season, then any registered voter can vote in the Republican one.

As specified up-thread, from the Sumter County voting page:

"However, there are times when all registered voters can vote in a primary election, regardless
of which major or minor political party they are registered or even if they are registered without
party affiliation:
• If all the candidates for an office have the same party affiliation and the winner of the
primary election will not face any opposition in the general election, then all registered
voters can vote for any of the candidates for that office in the primary election."

Bogie Shooter 08-03-2022 10:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Keefelane66 (Post 2121741)
Closed Primary Election
Florida is a closed primary election state. Only voters who are registered members of political parties may vote for respective party candidates.
I have no faith in The Daily Sun!

Independent voters were able to vote for Republican county commissioners. Faith in daily sun has nothing to do with it.

Bogie Shooter 08-03-2022 10:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mlmarr (Post 2121926)
no its Florida .. i register as conservative/republican to be able to vote in the primary's

Are there other kinds of Republican ?

Brynnie 08-03-2022 11:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jimmy o (Post 2121967)
What newspaper was this? I did not read that in The Daily Sun, or POA. In any event not true.

It's in the POA Bulletin, front page.

Blueblaze 08-03-2022 01:44 PM

I've got a better question -- why are so-called "non-partizan" offices on a primary ballot?

I started doing research on the county judges and school board seats on my sample Marion County ballot and discovered that these were declared "non-partizan". When I researched the candidates, I discovered that the ones on the ballot were the only people running, and their campaign pages carefully avoided anything that would give a hint to their values.

This is my first time voting in Florida. I don't get it. What happens in the general, if everyone has already voted on these people in the Primary? And why wouldn't you want to know the political persuasion of your judges and school board members?

And here's something even weirder -- there were no state senators or congressmen on the ballot. What's up with that?

Bill14564 08-03-2022 02:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blueblaze (Post 2122155)
I've got a better question -- why are so-called "non-partizan" offices on a primary ballot?

I started doing research on the county judges and school board seats on my sample Marion County ballot and discovered that these were declared "non-partizan". When I researched the candidates, I discovered that the ones on the ballot were the only people running, and their campaign pages carefully avoided anything that would give a hint to their values.

This is my first time voting in Florida. I don't get it. What happens in the general, if everyone has already voted on these people in the Primary? And why wouldn't you want to know the political persuasion of your judges and school board members?

And here's something even weirder -- there were no state senators or congressmen on the ballot. What's up with that?

You are registered Independent or possibly as a Republican. Since there will be candidates from both parties on the ballot in November, Independent voters do not get to vote on these positions in the August primary.

If you registered Republican then there may not be anyone running against the incumbent and so there would be no need to put these offices on the primary ballot.

The sample ballots for Democrats, Republicans, and Independents (no party) will all look different.

AZ SLIM 08-04-2022 02:18 AM

According to Pew the majority of independents lean toward one of the two major parties. Sometimes I wonder what advantage they have over those voters who are registered to a party.
A deeper question is about what the media calls "undecided" voters. If a voter really can't tell the difference between the values and objectives of republicans vs those of democrats, is that person informed enough to even be voting?

HospitalCoder 08-04-2022 07:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AZ SLIM (Post 2122294)
According to Pew the majority of independents lean toward one of the two major parties. Sometimes I wonder what advantage they have over those voters who are registered to a party.
A deeper question is about what the media calls "undecided" voters. If a voter really can't tell the difference between the values and objectives of republicans vs those of democrats, is that person informed enough to even be voting?

Undecided can be for many reasons. One example is you have always voted for one political party but don’t like the candidate this time around, maybe even hate him with every fiber of your being. So then you might be undecided. Another example is not liking either party so trying to decide who is the least objectionable.

Voting for “values and objectives” can find us with a horrible,vile person in office which kind of puts a hole in the whole “values” thing.

Blueblaze 08-04-2022 12:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bill14564 (Post 2122177)
You are registered Independent or possibly as a Republican. Since there will be candidates from both parties on the ballot in November, Independent voters do not get to vote on these positions in the August primary.

If you registered Republican then there may not be anyone running against the incumbent and so there would be no need to put these offices on the primary ballot.

The sample ballots for Democrats, Republicans, and Independents (no party) will all look different.

There were three people running in all the judge and school board races I mentioned. I still don't understand why they are on a Republican primary ballot if they aren't running as republicans.

And are you kidding me? You're saying there are Dems are running unopposed for the state house and senate? Wow.

Bill14564 08-04-2022 12:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blueblaze (Post 2122535)
There were three people running in all the judge and school board races I mentioned. I still don't understand why they are on a Republican primary ballot if they aren't running as republicans.

And are you kidding me? You're saying there are Dems are running unopposed for the state house and senate? Wow.

Judges and school boards are nonpartisan so they will be on every ballot.

Sumter County Commissioner candidates are all Republican. The winner of the primary will be the only name on the ballot in November. Effectively, for these positions, the August primary is the entire election. Therefore, these will be on every ballot.

If you are seeing DEM on the ballot for Senate, Governor, Attorney General, and Commissioner of Agriculture then you must be looking at a Democratic Party ballot.

OH! I think I understand what you are saying. If there is only one Republican candidate for a position, say DeSantis for Governor, then I don't know if the single name would be listed on the ballot. It wouldn't mean that only Democrats are running for the position, it would mean that there is only one Republican running for the position so there is no need to choose him/her in the primary. But I don't know, I can't see the Republican primary ballot.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:34 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.