Skip to content

Nonpartisan Election Reform Introduced In Another Battleground State

Nonpartisan Election Reform Introduced In Another Battleground State
Published:

North Carolina may be jumping on the “Top-Two” train. A house bill introduced this week, H.B. 737, would reform the current partisan open primary system to a nonpartisan, top-two primary similar to the systems already in place in California and Washington state.

H.B. 737 was introduced by state Reps. Ken Goodman (D-Rockingham) and Pricey Harrison (D-Greensboro). It would put all state and congressional elections on a single primary ballot where all voters and candidates, regardless of party affiliation, participate.

In the current system, any eligible voter may vote in any party’s primary election, but each party has a separate partisan primary election.

The new bill still allows for write-in candidates in the general election. However, if a candidate is on the ballot in the primary, they cannot be a write-in candidate in November.

In regards to vacancies, parties or committees are currently given the jurisdiction to choose a replacement without a vote. H.B. 737 would require the governor to hold an election to fill the seat or office.

Read the full bill:

Photo Credit: ESB Professional / shutterstock.com

Kaila Cooper

Kaila is a student at San Diego State University, studying Political Science and Urban Studies. She is passionate about civic participation and inspiring others of the importance of being apart of the democratic process.

IVN is rated Center by AllSides and High Credibility by MBFC — follow our independent journalism in your feed.

Add IVN on Google

Contact IVN

Questions about this article or our coverage? Send us a message. A free IVN member account is required.

Message sent

Thanks, we’ll review it and get back to you if needed.

Message not sent

Sorry, something went wrong. Please try again.

Sign in to send a message

Messages are tied to your IVN member account. Signing in is free and takes a few seconds.