American advocacy group
Open Primaries is an American 501(c)(4) and 501(c)(3) advocacy organization. Its headquarters are in New York City .
The group advocates for open primaries in the United States with a focus on the nonpartisan blanket primary .[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] [ 7] The group supported a successful ballot initiative in Colorado that created an open primary system in 2016.[ 8]
The group also publishes research on the benefits of public, nonpartisan primaries, as well as the harmful effects of closed primaries . During the 2016 presidential primary, the group declared that closed presidential primaries cost taxpayers roughly $287.8 million to administer, and that 26.3 million voters were locked out of the primary due to their unaffiliated or independent voter status.[ 9] [ 10] [ 11]
John Opdycke, President[ 12]
Jeremy Gruber , Senior Vice President[ 12]
Jesse Shayne, Digital Director
Jason Olson, Director of National Outreach
Dariel Cruz Rodriguez, Co-Director of Students for Open Primaries
^ Berman, Russell (8 March 2016). "What's the Answer to Political Polarization in the U.S.?" . The Atlantic.
^ Sago, Renata (28 February 2016). "Sick Of Political Parties, Unaffiliated Voters Are Changing Politics" . NPR.
^ Berman, Russell (19 October 2015). "What If the Parties Didn't Run Primaries?" . The Atlantic.
^ "Push For Open Primaries In New Mexico" . KRWG (NPR). 12 February 2016.
^ Vock, Daniel (18 August 2016). "In South Dakota, Voters Get Rare Chance to Transform Politics" . Governing Magazine.
^ Peterson, Kristina (28 March 2016). "Effort in South Dakota Aims to Drop Parties" . The Wall Street Journal .
^ Gruber, Jeremy (19 September 2016). "Rasoul and Gruber column: Look to Nebraska: People over partisanship" . Richmond Times-Dispatch.
^ Opdycke, John (20 September 2016). "Colorado Primary Reform: The Fix Is In" . Newsweek.
^ Harding, Robert (24 June 2016). "Report: Millions of NY voters blocked from voting in presidential primaries, but still fund elections" . The Auburn Citizen.
^ Sasko, Claire (30 June 2016). "Report: Pennsylvania Primaries Fifth Most-Expensive in the Nation" . Philadelphia Magazine.
^ Sherrets, Dane (21 April 2016). "HOW A STATE CAN PREVENT 3.2 MILLION REGISTERED VOTERS FROM VOTING" . The Centrist Project.
^ a b "Staff" . Open Primaries . Retrieved 2019-10-25 .