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OPINION: Partisan Games are Damaging Our Democracy - Here’s How We Can Fix It

OPINION: Partisan Games are Damaging Our Democracy - Here’s How We Can Fix It
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It has been one month since the 2018 midterm elections were decided. Much in our politics has changed: the Republicans built on their majority in the US Senate, while Democrats won back the House of Representatives and flipped several governorships and state legislatures.

Political news coverage has also included topics such as the Mueller investigation, trade negotiations with China, new appointments in the Trump administration, and potential Democratic Presidential candidates in 2020. Meanwhile, while we are all distracted by these issues, in several states there are significant, and very troubling, electoral issues.

Since the polls closed on November 6:

These are not isolated incidents. They are the most recent examples in a long list of efforts by both major political parties to use their power to skew the electoral process in their favor.

While political leaders and pundits are quick to cry foul when the opposition party is at fault, they are nowhere to be found when it is their own party playing these dangerous partisan games. This is, of course, because neither party is truly interested in ending them.

So, what needs to be done to fix a broken political system that is overwhelmingly disapproved of by voters? The answer is to shift power away from the two party duopoly when it comes to conducting and overseeing elections, empowering instead officials who will act independently of the two parties.

We need independent redistricting commissions who will create sensible congressional districts, rather than gerrymandered maps to favor a political party; you need those in charge with supervising elections to be unaffiliated from a party, rather than the vocally partisan individuals that often are put in place by elected officials; and we need there to be serious consequences for those who attempt to interfere in elections, consistently applied without regard for politics or political parties.

Additionally, we need reforms that will increase the likelihood of electing more moderate representatives, including opening primaries, using ranked choice voting, and enforcing transparency in campaign funding.

In the thirty days since the 2018 midterm elections, Americans across the country and political spectrum have made it clear that they lack confidence in our electoral system. If we ever want truly free and fair elections, we need to come together and demand that the two parties end the political games and put the American people over partisan politics.

Neal Simon

Neal Simon is a business executive and philanthropist from Potomac, Md. who ran for the U.S. Senate in Maryland as an independent candidate.

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