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DC Independent Voters Are Pissed City Officials Have Denied Them Open Primaries

Primary elections in Washington, DC, are coming up in June. However, while three-quarters of the city’s electorate voted for them to be open to independent voters, they won’t be – because city officials refuse to make the switch from a closed partisan system.

Washington DC is about to hold its 2026 primary elections, but even though voters wanted them to be open, they remain closed.
Photo by Jorge Alcala on Unsplash

Primary elections in Washington, DC, are coming up in June. However, while three-quarters of the city’s electorate voted for them to be open to independent voters, they won’t be – because city officials refuse to make the switch from a closed partisan system.

And independent voters in DC are understandably upset.

Tanya Hutchins, who has worked in all areas of multimedia, posted a video on her social media accounts expressing frustration with the DC City Council. “I’m a DC voter who is pissed off that Council will not fully fund Initiative 83,” she says in the video. 

“The issue passed last year with nearly 75%. It approved ranked choice voting, but it also approved allowing independents like me to vote in primaries.”
DC Dems to Independent Voters: You Don’t Matter
The DC City Council had one final opportunity to fund a provision approved by 73% of city voters in November that would open primary elections to 83,000+ independent voters – and the Democratic-controlled body elected instead not to honor the will of voters.

As Hutchins noted, Initiative 83 was approved by voters in 2024 with 73% of the vote. The citizen-driven measure called for open primaries that allow independent voters to participate in critical taxpayer-funded elections and the use of ranked choice voting in all city elections.

Throughout the course of the election and after, Initiative 83 was the subject of controversy:

In July 2025, the city council voted 8-4 to fund the ranked choice voting portion of Initiative 83, but did not include open primaries. Independent voters remain locked out of elections that decide most contests in a heavily Democratic city.

“Council says they have to print more ballots and educational materials,” says Hutchins, referring to claims of added costs to elections. In reality, the implementation of open primaries would account for 0.007% of the city’s multi‑billion-dollar budget.

The actions by the DC City Council have even gotten the Washington Post to pen an editorial asking, "Why are DC Democrats so afraid of independent voters?

There is a DC City Council meeting scheduled for May 1. Hutchins encourages independent voters to go to the hearing and demand their right to vote. “I sent in my written testimony, basically saying, ‘Let independents vote!’"

Shawn Griffiths

Shawn Griffiths

Shawn is an election reform expert and National Editor of IVN.us. He studied history and philosophy at the University of North Texas. He joined the IVN team in 2012.

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