From Open Primaries <[email protected]>
Subject The Primary Buzz (10/31/2025)
Date October 31, 2025 2:30 PM
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Oklahoma Campaign Rallies To Start Signature Drive



The 90-day signature gathering effort for State Question 836 <[link removed]> (top two open primaries) officially kicked off this week <[link removed]>with launch events in Oklahoma City and Tulsa.  Volunteers are fanning out to every corner of the state so every Oklahoman has a chance to sign and have their voice heard. If you live in Oklahoma, sign up to volunteer! <[link removed]>

Fundraising for the drive has ramped up - both in Oklahoma and among the Open Primaries national donor network.  In the last few days a number of Open Primaries supporters have jumped in to support Vote Yes on 836 <[link removed]>. Will you join them? Every dollar ensures this important campaign makes it on the 2026 ballot.

<[link removed]>DONATE <[link removed]>

Keep on, keepin’ On Sooners!



Open Primaries Debate Roils Florida Democratic Party 



Political parties have the legal right to open their primaries to independent voters, and Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried has been publicly debating <[link removed]> the idea for months. Ironic, considering the party played a leading role in opposing a ballot initiative for open primaries in 2020 that still gained 57% of the vote with few resources spent. But the party's fortunes have since deteriorated and Fried understands she needs the state’s 3.4 million independent voters that are currently shut out of the state’s closed primaries. 

Florida Open Primaries <[link removed]> launched a campaign earlier this year to organize independents to make their voices heard to Party leaders, including releasing the findings of a poll <[link removed]>finding super majorities of independents and Democrats supporting opening the Party’s primary and primaries more broadly across the board.

Now, in a series of emails obtained by Politico <[link removed]>, the depth of the debate within the Party is on full display, with Executive Committees in two counties already supporting the idea while some party activists are calling open primaries a “Big Con.”

FOP is stepping up their efforts to stoke the fires. We’ll keep you updated.



New York Independents Speak Out

As New Yorkers head to the polls, OP SVP Jeremy Gruber and independent NYers joined News 12 New York to talk about one of the most backwards and exclusionary election systems in the country-NYC. Check them out:

<[link removed]>

Oregon Ballot Initiative Is Getting Noticed

As we reported last week, a pair of ballot initiatives <[link removed]> to open the primaries in Oregon were filed by former state Gov. Ted Kulongoski (D), former state Rep. Cheri Helt (R-Bend) and Andrew Kaza, co-chair of the state council of the Independent Party of Oregon.  

They lay out a unique new form of top two primary, one that offers parties and independent candidates a choice-participate in a top two open primary where every voter votes or pay your own way with a party caucus or by gathering signatures if you’re an independent candidate.



The campaign is getting attention <[link removed]> all over the Beaver State. We’re told by campaign leaders that they have already gathered the initial signatures needed for the initiative to undergo legal vetting by the state and a public input process that could end in a ballot title by year's end.

It’s an exciting new campaign and we’ll keep you posted as they continue to build.



Time for New Jersey’s Independent Voters To Have A Stronger Voice

Long time independent leader and Open Primaries supporter Sue Davies is in New Jersey Spotlight News this week to talk about the need to finally recognize the state’s massive growth in independent voters. As she notes:



Read her full piece here <[link removed]>.





Since joining the team, I’ve been getting acquainted with a wave of young independents on Tik Tok who are speaking out about how they feel politically, and offering insight into how our generation is redefining political identity. There’s so much honest, thoughtful, even funny, content out there from people trying to make sense of a system that doesn’t speak for them. 

I wanted to share a couple of their videos with you today:

1. @pitneyy — 23-year-old from Kentucky


He captures what a lot of young voters are feeling: disconnected from both major parties and not really sure where they belong. Many are calling themselves or identifying as politically homeless (#politicallyhomeless), and his post gives a face to that sentiment

<[link removed]> <[link removed]>2. @itsjenisecheyenne — Black independent perspective


Jenise shares what independence looks like through her own experience as a young Black voter. It’s a thoughtful reflection on the nuances of belonging and political agency.

3. @iamhocuspocus – Speaking out as an independent 

Amanda shares what being an independent voter is like for her through personal reflections, offering a perspective of what being a young independent can look like in practice

<[link removed]>What’s clear across these videos is that there’s a generation searching for a political home; becoming independent and redefining what a political home looks like altogether. They’re asking hard questions, rejecting easy, antiquated labels, and imagining something different.

Have a great weekend,

The Open Primaries Team

<[link removed]> <[link removed]> <[link removed]> <[link removed]> <[link removed]>Open Primaries · 244 Madison Ave, #1106, New York, NY 10016, United States
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