In the 2000 presidential campaign, John McCain excelled in states with open primaries — in which anyone can vote — thanks to support from independents and Dems who preferred the Arizona senator to Bush.
Six years later, some Republicans are considering steps that might make McCain’s 2008 effort a little more complicated.
Republicans in states that gave Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) victories or near victories in the 2000 GOP presidential primaries are looking to bar non-Republicans from voting in their primaries in 2008, which would make it even more difficult for the Arizonan to win the nomination should he run in two years.
Michigan’s Republican Party Central Committee more than a week ago approved a plan that calls for holding the Republican and Democratic primaries on the same day, forcing voters to cast ballots in either a Republican or Democratic primary but not both, GOP executive director Saul Anuzis said in an interview.
The expectation is that there will be fewer so-called crossover ballots if voters can only participate in one primary, Anuzis added. The GOP head must now confer with his Democratic counterpart, Mark Brewer. Democrats are thought to support the change.
In Washington state, where Republicans chose the presidential nominee in 2000 through a combination of local caucuses and a statewide primary, the party is looking to shift more power to the caucuses. Traditionally, conservative activists, from abortion opponents to gun-rights proponents, have dominated caucuses, in Washington and elsewhere.
In 2000, McCain won Michigan’s primary with hundreds of thousands of votes from independents and Dems, and he did nearly as well in Washington state. If these plans move forward, he may have a tougher time in the next go-around. Regardless of what one thinks of McCain, this idea of limiting participation strikes me as a good idea.
Maybe my opinion is in the minority on this, but I’ve never understood the reasoning behind open primaries. If Republicans are going to choose a party nominee, it makes sense to limit the choice to other Republicans. The same holds true, of course, for Dems. Allowing others to participate in a primary opens the door to manipulation — outsiders can vote for the worst candidate in order to hurt the party.
Sure, allowing everyone to vote in an open process may help highlight candidates with broad appeal, but that seems like the kind of quality primary voters should be considering anyway when choosing a nominee. Am I wildly off base here?