In a govÂernÂment of, by and for the peoÂple, choosÂing who will lead and serve us is a sacred duty, not to be takÂen lightly.
It isn’t posÂsiÂble to be a responÂsiÂble votÂer if all you know about canÂdiÂdates is their parÂty affiliation.
Those who haven’t done their homeÂwork should stay home and let those who take citÂiÂzenÂship seriÂousÂly choose our leaders.
Better yet, they should eduÂcate themÂselves to become betÂter voters.
They should read newsÂpaÂper artiÂcles. Listen to radio interÂviews. Watch teleÂvised debates. Attend canÂdiÂdate forums and ask quesÂtions. Don’t be gullible. Don’t decide how to vote based on maliÂcious ads, Facebook posts, or who has the most yard signs.
And don’t go into the polling booth unpreÂpared and check a sinÂgle box to select all the Democrats or all the Republicans on the ballot.
That’s not a responÂsiÂble way to vote, and it shouldn’t be an option.
In fact, it isn’t an option in most states.
According to the National Conference of State Legislators, Kentucky is one of only six states that allow straight-tickÂet votÂing. The othÂers are Alabama, Indiana, Michigan, Oklahoma, and South Carolina.
Americans increasÂingÂly believe that our counÂtry is too dividÂed. A Politico poll pubÂlished two days before the 2025 genÂerÂal elecÂtion found that nearÂly three out of five surÂveyed said polarÂizaÂtion was worse than it was five years ago. Among those 65 and oldÂer, almost four out of five felt that way.
One way to bridge the gap would be to make elecÂtions less partisan.
No straight-ticket voting
During his one term in the state legÂisÂlaÂture, Les Yates sponÂsored a biparÂtiÂsan bill, HB 227, that would have amendÂed KRS 117.381 to remove straight-parÂty votÂing as an option in a regÂuÂlar election.
It was introÂduced on Jan. 9, 2020 and sent to the Elections, Constitutional Amendments and Intergovernmental Affairs Committee, where it died.
Cherlynn Stevenson, a Democrat who served with the Republican Yates in the House, recalled that “his own parÂty priÂmaried him and got rid of him.”
Three Democrats who were also sponÂsors of the bill — Joe Graviss, Maria Sorolis, and Wilson Stone — also were not re-electÂed or chose not to run.
Sometimes doing the right thing can be costÂly, but it’s still right.
I hope that in the 2026 legÂislaÂtive sesÂsion, someÂone will have the courage to sponÂsor a simÂiÂlar biparÂtiÂsan bill and it will become law, bringÂing Kentucky in line with the 44 states that encourÂage peoÂple to think before they vote.
In the 47 years that I’ve been a votÂer, I’ve nevÂer votÂed straight parÂty. That’s because I can’t rememÂber an elecÂtion in which I thought the best canÂdiÂdate in every race was a Democrat or a Republican. If I ever did think that, it wouldn’t be a burÂden to take anothÂer minute to look over the balÂlot and mark each candidate’s name individually.
It isn’t a lot to ask.
Avoid open primaries
The way Yates rememÂbered it when I interÂviewed him for his canÂdiÂdate proÂfile (he’s runÂning again for state repÂreÂsenÂtaÂtive after servÂing a term as counÂty judge-execÂuÂtive) is that the elecÂtion bill he sponÂsored was to allow open priÂmaries. But I searched and couldn’t find a final verÂsion of an elecÂtions bill he sponÂsored that includÂed that.
According to Ballotpedia, a nonÂparÂtiÂsan and nonÂprofÂit, online politÂiÂcal encyÂcloÂpeÂdia, as of February of this year, 15 states allowed open priÂmaries and some allowed indeÂpenÂdents — but not memÂbers of the othÂer parÂty — to vote in a party’s primaries.
A few othÂers, includÂing Ohio and Tennessee, allowed votÂers to decide on priÂmaÂry Election Day which party’s balÂlot they wantÂed, but they couldÂn’t ask for both.
I don’t like those ideas. They open the door to misÂchief by allowÂing memÂbers of one parÂty to medÂdle in the othÂer party’s nomÂiÂnatÂing process.
In recent years, it has been a stratÂeÂgy for Democrats to vote in Republican priÂmaries in order to nomÂiÂnate the most extreme canÂdiÂdates because they think those Republicans would be the easÂiÂest for Democrats to beat in a genÂerÂal elecÂtion. But that’s a danÂgerÂous game. Often it doesn’t work, and the extremÂists get elected.
Republicans probÂaÂbly have employed the same tacÂtics, but it doesn’t make it less wrong that both sides do it.
Why not ranked choice?
The purÂpose of a priÂmaÂry is to select the party’s canÂdiÂdates for the genÂerÂal elecÂtion. If anyÂone can parÂticÂiÂpate in a party’s priÂmaÂry regardÂless of their parÂty affilÂiÂaÂtion, what’s the point of havÂing a primary?
Just have ranked-choice votÂing instead. That’s where those with the least votes are elimÂiÂnatÂed and the top conÂtenders, regardÂless of parÂty, move on to the next phase, just as we do in nonÂparÂtiÂsan priÂmaÂry races for city offiÂcials, judges and school board members.
I think the ranked choice idea has some merÂit, but I’d like to see how it plays out in othÂer states before Kentucky conÂsidÂers it.
The goal of ranked choice votÂing is to have more modÂerÂate and reaÂsonÂable canÂdiÂdates rather than radÂiÂcals. But it may not work in states like California or Texas, where one parÂty has a huge majorÂiÂty and the most parÂtiÂsan activists conÂtrol the ground game.
Changing party affiliation
Finally, the thing about Kentucky’s elecÂtion laws that irks me most is that if you want to change your parÂty regÂisÂtraÂtion, you must do so by Dec. 31 of the year before the elections.
That’s absurd!
No othÂer state comes close to requirÂing votÂers to decide on a parÂty so far ahead of the priÂmaries. And what’s so egreÂgious about it is that votÂers don’t even know who the canÂdiÂdates are going to be on each party’s balÂlot until about the secÂond week of January, because many politiÂcians wait until the deadÂline or a few days before the deadÂline to file their papers.
This year, there are no Democratic priÂmaÂry races in Clark County for counÂty offices, but sevÂerÂal counÂty offices have two or more canÂdiÂdates in the Republican primaries.
I think many votÂers would like to have known that before they had to decide how to register.
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Most states allow votÂers to change their parÂty affilÂiÂaÂtion by the last day to regÂisÂter before the priÂmaÂry, which is usuÂalÂly about a month before the election.
That makes sense. If you have to change your address because you moved, why not change your parÂty at the same time? That’s enough time to print balÂlots or allow votÂers who qualÂiÂfy for absenÂtee balÂlots to request them.
Although I don’t think peoÂple should be allowed to decide which parÂty’s priÂmaÂry they want to vote in on Primary Election Day or vote in the priÂmaÂry of the parÂty to which they belong, I think they should not have to decide on a parÂty almost a half a year before the priÂmaries. That’s just too restrictive.
2027 is an off year for elecÂtions in Kentucky, so legÂisÂlaÂtors in this sesÂsion should introÂduce a biparÂtiÂsan bill to make the deadÂline for changÂing parÂty regÂisÂtraÂtion the same date as the regÂuÂlar votÂer regÂisÂtraÂtion deadÂline and have it in place for the 2028 presÂiÂdenÂtial elecÂtion year.
Kentucky should no longer be an outlier.

