State Politics

Want to vote as Republican in Idaho’s primary? Bill would move up deadline to register

Kathy Wiedemann and Gary Wiedemann cast their ballots at Capital High School on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. A bill introduced on Thursday would move up the deadline for unaffiliated voters to register as Republican.
Kathy Wiedemann and Gary Wiedemann cast their ballots at Capital High School on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. A bill introduced on Thursday would move up the deadline for unaffiliated voters to register as Republican. smiller@idahostatesman.com

A GOP-backed bill, introduced Thursday, would create a new deadline for the state’s more than 300,000 unaffiliated voters to participate in closed Republican primary elections.

The proposal comes as political pundits have recently called for independents and Democrats to register as Republicans so they can vote in the 2022 GOP primary. The Idaho Republican Party hosts closed primary elections, meaning only registered Republicans can vote in primaries.

House Bill 439, sponsored by Rep. Caroline Nilsson Troy, R-Genesee, strikes current state law that allows unaffiliated voters to change their party affiliation up to the day of a primary election. Instead, unaffiliated voters would have the same deadline as partisan voters to register with a party prior to a primary.

This year, the deadline is March 11, more than two months before the May 17 election.

“Unaffiliated voters, if they choose to participate in a primary for the Democrats or Republicans, would have to change their party affiliation at the same time as the major parties in the state,” Troy told the House State Affairs Committee, which unanimously voted to introduce the bill without discussion Thursday.

Kathy Wiedemann and Gary Wiedemann cast their ballots at Capital High School on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. A bill introduced on Thursday would move up the deadline for unaffiliated voters to register as Republican.
Kathy Wiedemann and Gary Wiedemann cast their ballots at Capital High School on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. A bill introduced on Thursday would move up the deadline for unaffiliated voters to register as Republican. Sarah A. Miller smiller@idahostatesman.com

While the bill would alter state code dealing with affiliation changes, parties themselves dictate which voters can participate in their primary elections. The Idaho Democratic Party hosts open primaries, meaning all voters, regardless of their affiliation, can vote in the party’s primary.

Republicans allow only registered Republicans to vote in their primary elections — that change came in 2011. The party platform says, “To allow those who have no loyalty or allegiance to the Idaho Republican Party or its platform and resolutions to select our candidates is simply not proper.”

More unaffiliated than Democratic voters in Idaho

Nearly 309,000 Idaho voters are unaffiliated, according to data from the Idaho Secretary of State’s Office. That’s more than twice the number of registered Democrats.

In recent months, the Idaho 97 Project, an anti-extremism and anti-disinformation nonprofit, and others, such as former Boise State University President Bob Kustra, have called on independents and Democrats to register as Republicans and vote in the GOP primary.

“I know there are Idahoans who would not feel comfortable leaving the Democratic primary, and I respect that, but they might also think about where they can have the greatest impact on Idaho’s future,” Kustra wrote in a September column in the Idaho Statesman.

Mike Satz, executive director of the Idaho 97 Project, told the Statesman by phone Thursday that Idaho is a “one-party rule” state, and making it more difficult to vote in the Republican primary — which typically produces the candidate that wins the general election in statewide races — is akin to “voter suppression.”

An emergency clause in the bill would make it effective immediately upon passage, meaning the new rules would apply to the upcoming primary.

“This is a major change to the rules so close to the primary,” Satz said.

This story was originally published January 13, 2022 at 1:38 PM.

Ryan Suppe
Idaho Statesman
Ryan Suppe covers state politics for the Idaho Statesman. He previously covered local government and business in the Treasure Valley and eastern Idaho. Drop him a line at rsuppe@idahostatesman.com. Support my work with a digital subscription
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