aquascoot wrote on Jan 28
th, 2024 at 11:32am:
scope wrote on Jan 28
th, 2024 at 10:20am:
Frank wrote on Jan 28
th, 2024 at 10:01am:
scope wrote on Jan 28
th, 2024 at 9:44am:
Frank wrote on Jan 28
th, 2024 at 8:08am:
Frank wrote on Jan 26
th, 2024 at 12:44pm:
She has no chance against Trump.
New Hampshire allows people who are not registered Republicans to vote in the Republican primary. Most states don’t do that. In most states, only Republican voters participate in Republican primaries. Haley couldn't win a Republican primary contest in NH with Democrat and independent voters in the mix.
Donald J Trump is a genius. That's what the J stands for. Tsk, tsk
What a load of bull, go back to school and learn how primaries are conducted in the various states.
Democrats can not cross over and vote republican in the New Hampshire primary, only unaffiliated voters can vote in party primaries and only after registering 3 weeks before the primary as an unaffiliated voter.
After getting so much wrong in that post, its obvious you are not a genius frank
Silly.
Not every demcrate voter in NH is registered AS a democrat voter, nor every Republican voter is registered AS a republican. In other words, you don't have to be a registered Republican in NH to vote in the primaries.
Thats why the term unaffiliated is used frank.
They are not registered by either party.
Trying to save your embarrassment in being wrong,just makes the hole you are digging deeper
ah
no
frank is 100 % correct.
NH is an open primary
One area of contention in open primaries is “crossover” voting. It most often involves voters affiliated with one political party voting in the primary of another political party to influence that party’s nomination.
New Hampshire is a state known for its independent voters. Currently, undeclared voters can choose which party’s primary to vote in on the primary Election Day and then immediately unregister from that party before leaving the polling place.
and she still couldnt beat the big guy
Incorrect
New Hampshire follows the rules for unaffiliated voters.
Open to Unaffiliated Voters
A number of states allow only unaffiliated voters to participate in any party primary they choose, but do not allow voters who are registered with one party to vote in another party’s primary. This system differs from a true open primary because a Democrat cannot cross over and vote in a Republican party primary, or vice versa. New Hampshire requires that unaffiliated voters declare affiliation with a party at the polls in order to vote in that party’s primary. In Colorado, unaffiliated voters must return just one party’s mail ballot, or state which party ballot they want at the polls. The choice is public information, although it does not change the voter's unaffiliated status.
States that use this system are
New Hampshire
Arizona
Colorado
Maine
North Carolina
Rhode Island
Massachusetts
Maybe horseboy should have gone to uni, oh wait that requires the skill of reading.