Subj : Two party state To : ROB MCCART From : Mike Powell Date : Wed Jul 30 2025 10:53:30 > If you are a registered Republican can you vote Democrat if you > decide it's a good idea some election? You can vote for *any* candidate in the *general* election, but not the primary in most places. Primary = nominating the candidate that will *represent your party* in the general election. General = voting for who you want to hold the office. Most states won't allow you to cross party lines during the primary elections. When you go in, they only give you the ballot for the party you are registerd in, and you vote to nominate the candidates you'd like to see on the general ballot. They cannot stop you from voting for whoever you want on the *general* ballot... everyone in your district gets the same ballot, and all candiates are listed -- Republican, Democrat, and otherwise. In both cases, you can always write someone in but their chances of winning go down the larger the race is... local elections can be won, state and national not nearly as likely. > I suppose if ballots are secret they'd never know, just be annoyed > if they don't get as many votes as they expected.. Correct. In the general they don't/shouldn't know. For the primary, they don't know who you choose but they do know which ballot -- Republican or Democrat -- they gave you, and you are restricted to using it. Mike * SLMR 2.1a * IBM = Institute of Black Magic --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) .