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A model to fix Illinois’ broken primary system

On Tuesday, a small number of people in Illinois will head to the polls to determine the party nominees for November’s general election. If history and current projections are any guide, we are looking at a turnout that would be considered a crisis in any other healthy democracy. Yet, in Illinois, we call it primary election day.

As millions of dollars flood our airwaves and mailboxes, the target isn’t the average citizen or swing voter — it’s the “reliable” Democratic primary voter. Only 19% of Illinois registered voters went to the polls for the 2024 primary. This trend holds nationally; only 21.3% of eligible voters participated in the 2022 primary.

Democratic candidates in Illinois and their consultants invest staggering sums of money to target those reliable Democratic primary voters, knowing that whoever wins Tuesday in this “blue” state will easily win in November when the main election, in name only, takes place. Every candidate knows what the voters often miss: that the action is in March, not November.

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The current partisan primary system is a gatekeeper that deprives voters of meaningful choices in the general election. It incentivizes candidates to play to the furthest edges of their base and inevitably devolves into personality fights and negative campaigning, leaving the exhausted majority of voters to choose between two pre-selected options in November.

In 2024, effectively 87% of seats in the House of Representatives were decided in the primary, and were “safe” in the general election, according to a report in U.S. News & World Report. For those of us in the thick of Democratic politics, this high-cost, low-participation churn has become the “new normal,” but we should not accept this distortion of democracy as acceptable.

There is a better way: the Alaska model.

In 2020, Alaska moved to a nonpartisan “Top Four” primary. There are no separate Democratic or Republican ballots. Every candidate — regardless of party — appears on a single ballot available to every voter. The top four finishers move on to the general election, where voters use ranked choice voting to ensure the winner has true majority support.

The results in Alaska have been a revelation:

We are currently sleepwalking through a process that degrades our democracy by exclusion. We’ve accepted a system where the “primary” is the only election that matters, yet it’s the one where the fewest people have a voice.

Illinois doesn’t have to stay stuck in this cycle of expensive apathy. By adopting the Alaska model, we can move toward a system where every vote is a meaningful one, and where our representatives are accountable to the many, not the few.


Todd Connor is co-founder of Veterans for All Voters, a national grassroots organization advocating for political reforms to depolarize politics and expand democratic participation. He previously founded Bunker Labs and The Collective Academy, and he teaches social impact at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
 

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