I am an independent, that is, no part of anyone’s “base”.
As I hold no favor for either party, it is up to individual candidates to win my vote. I will evaluate whose policies and plans most resonate with my position, and vote accordingly when the time comes.
My only allegiance is to my conscience. “Dutiful” partisanship is what created (and creates) the problems we have in our govt. I owe my vote to no one.
The primary here in Florida is in about 2 weeks, and it seems more sane to evaluate whomever is “still standing” at that point, given how both the roster of candidates and their messages evolve. Then they have until Nov to impress me.
I’m thoroughly UNimpressed by the current buffoon president, but given that the alternatives are just other rich, doddering, white men in their 70’s, who will be just as stymied by the feckless, failing Congress as the current Dementia patient-in-Chief, I doubt my conscience will be well served, no matter who is elected.
Best choice of the lot? We’ll see.
It is considered a “swing state” (depending on who is doing the polling) by virtue of its high count of delegates. No Republican has lost Fla and gained the WH since Cal Coolidge.
But the primary is a closed election, meaning that only registered Democrats can vote in the primary. As an independent, I cannot vote in the primary.
I think an argument might be made that negotiation within the confines of Capital Hill is more the exception than the rule. Less a strategy than a peculiar windfall of events. All under the auspices of partisan distrust and propaganda.
The Founding Fathers would be relieved they didn’t live to see what dysfunction their current successors have wrought.