Politics

States Like New Hampshire Make It Easy For ‘Undeclared’ Voters To Dilute Primary Elections

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Democrats don’t just attempt to interfere in the electoral process when their own candidates are involved — turns out, they meddle in Republican elections too. That’s exactly what they’re gearing up to do in New Hampshire’s upcoming GOP presidential primary in favor of Nikki Haley, the closest thing they can find to a Democrat in the Republican primary election.

In recent days, legacy media operatives have been suggesting Democrat-leaning unaffiliated voters could cast their ballots for the former South Carolina governor in the Granite State’s semi-closed primary on Jan. 23. The tactic reflects a strategy Haley herself bragged about when she told reporters last month: “If we get independents, if we get conservative Democrats, that’s what the Republican Party should pursue. Our goal is to get as many people in the tent as we can.”

While polls are often inaccurate and used to shape as much as reflect public opinion, recent surveys have shown Haley within striking distance of former President Donald Trump in New Hampshire. These polls, according to NBC News, also reportedly show the former United Nations ambassador “ahead of Trump among independent voters, getting about half of her total support from that group.”

In New Hampshire, “undeclared” voters are authorized to vote in any party’s state or presidential primary of their choosing, with state law requiring these individuals “to choose either a Democratic or Republican ballot when [they] go to vote.” When voting in a party’s primary, these unaffiliated voters are then registered to become a member of that party “unless

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