Independent activist news this week was def centered on young people. See John Opdycke’s piece “Going Indy” and consider the fact that “fully 50 percent of voters aged 18-29 now identify as independents…” (Opdycke is the Chief of Staff for IndependentVoting.org/CUIP.) Let that sink in for a moment.
Then pivot back towards the triangulationists featured in John Avlon’s CNN oped “Bill Clinton Back and Looking Good“.
Now pan to NYC independent youth contingent presenting 1,084 signatures of people under the age of 30 calling for the Charter Revision Commission to put a referendum for nonpartisan municipal elections for New York City on the ballot in the next election. Commissioners Hope Cohen and Kathryn Patterson dialogued with these young activists at the Brooklyn St. Francis College public hearing on April 20. WHICH by the way none of the local media covered… although they are beginning to acknowledge that nonpartisan elections is the critical issue for this commission. Hmmm…. You can view the testimony from youth and independents at HanksterTube. And also Bryan Puertas’ article on The DeLibero.
Hats off to the organizers in California who are pushing for passage of Proposition 14, a referendum that will allow independents (aka “decline to state“) to vote in statewide elections. The Hankster wishes you all the best. Open primaries that bring new voices (youth for example) to the table, and new coalitions together, could only help.
In New York, expect more politically upwardly mobile partisan powers-that-be animosity toward independent NY State Senator Pedro Espada Jr. who is proposing some interesting nonpartisan election reforms…
Power to the People, Read On!
For more news for independent )and young( voters, see The Hankster…
Provocateur/ pundit/ organizer Nancy Hanks is a long-time activist in the independent political movement who’s done it all: petitioning to put independent candidates on the ballot from New York to Texas and points east, west, north and south; fundraising for the independent think tank, the Committee for a Unified Independent Party (CUIP), and its online counterpart, IndependentVoting.org; running as an independent for New York City Council from Queens, New York City’s most diverse borough; serving as the current Treasurer of the Queens County Committee of the Independence Party of New York (of the IP NYC Organizations); conducting research for the Neo-Independent, a magazine that addresses the concerns of independent voters.