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Electoral fusion in the United States

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(Redirected fromPolitical fusion)
Electoral strategy
Not to be confused withFusionism.

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Electoral fusion in the United States is an arrangement where two or moreUnited States political parties on aballot list the samecandidate,[1] allowing that candidate to receive votes on multiple party lines in the same election.[2]

Electoral fusion is also known asfusion voting,cross endorsement,multiple party nomination,multi-party nomination,plural nomination, andballot freedom.[3][4]

Electoral fusion was once widespread in the U.S. and legal in every state. However, as of 2024, it remains legal and common only in New York and Connecticut.[5][6][7]

Overview

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In 2016,Business Insider wrote: "Fusion voting gives voters a chance to support a major candidate while registering their unhappiness with that candidate's party. A cross-endorsement from a smaller party like theWorking Families Party can also help inform voters about where candidates stand on certain issues".[8]

In 2019,The Nation wrote: "Fusion is a response to thewinner-take-all electoral system. It solves the 'wasted vote' or 'spoiler' dilemmas that otherwise plaguethird parties, and allows citizens who don't fit neatly into the Democratic or Republican boxes to nevertheless participate constructively in politics".[1]

Before theCivil War, fusion voting was a common electoral tactic ofabolitionist forces, who formed a number of anti-slaverythird parties, including theLiberty andFree Soil parties. These and other abolitionist third parties cross-nominated major party candidates running under theWhig label, fusing more than one party behind a single candidate.[9][10]

After the Civil War, agrarian interest groups and the political parties they founded continued to use fusion voting to form alliances between third parties and the weaker of the two major parties, usually the Democrats in the West and Midwest.[11] In the 19th and early 20th century, minor parties used fusion as a way to signal that their support for a major party candidate brought a meaningful number of voters to the candidate.[12] Votes for fusion candidates were tallied first by party, then added together to produce the outcome. Historian Peter Argersinger argues that this helped "maintain a significant third party tradition by guaranteeing that dissenters' votes could be more than symbolic protest".[11] Fusion allowed minor parties to avoid the "wasted vote" and "spoiler" dilemmas that small parties face in a non-proportional voting system.[13]

ThePeople's Party (also known as the Populists) is regarded as the most successful third party of the era.[14] That success produced a counter-reaction from the dominant major parties, who then usedstate legislatures to enact bans against fusion in the late nineteenth and early 20th century.[11] In northern and western states, fusion was largely banned byRepublican-led legislatures. One RepublicanMinnesota state legislator said: "We don't propose to allow theDemocrats to make allies of the Populists,Prohibitionists, or any other party, and get up combination tickets against us. We can whip them single-handed, but don't intend to fight all creation."[15] In southern states, fusion was largely banned by Democrats who supportedJim Crow, in an attempt to prevent political alliances betweennewly-enfranchised Black voters and poor white farmers.[16]

Most states banned fusion by the early 20th century.[17] South Dakota banned the practice in 1999,[18] Delaware banned it in 2011,[19] and South Carolina banned it in 2022.[20] InTimmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party (1997), theUS Supreme Court ruled that prohibiting electoral fusion does not violate theFirst Amendment of the Constitution.[21]

Electoral fusion was once widespread in the US, but as of 2024, it remains legal and common only in New York andConnecticut.[9] It is partially legal in three others: California allows fusion in presidential elections only, andPennsylvania andMaryland permit it in certain elections, including but not limited to thejudiciary.[22][page needed] In Oregon and Vermont, a system of dual-labeling exists, which allows a candidate to list multiple party endorsements on a single line, but disallows the traditional fusion system in which a minor party has its own ballot line and votes are tallied by party.[23] InNew Hampshire, fusion is legal in rare cases when primary elections are won bywrite-in candidates.[24]

As of 2024, theAlianza de País in Puerto Rico, theNew Jersey Moderate Party, the Common Sense Party in Michigan and theUnited Kansas Party are attempting to use litigation to bring back fusion voting in their areas.[9][25][26]

New Mexico,[27]Massachusetts,[28] andRhode Island[29] had bills to allow fusion voting.

Historical examples

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Presidential elections

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In1872, both the newly formedLiberal Republican Party and the Democratic Party nominated the Liberal RepublicanHorace Greeley as their candidate for US President: "If [the Democratic Party] was to stand any chance at all against Grant, it must avoid putting up a candidate of its own who would merely split the opposition vote. It must take Greeley."[30]

In thepresidential election of 1896,William Jennings Bryan was nominated by both the Democratic Party and the Populist Party, albeit with different vice presidential candidates,Arthur Sewall for the Democrats andThomas E. Watson for the Populists. This election led to the downfall of the Populist Party, especially in Southern states (such as Watson's Georgia, as well as North Carolina and Tennessee) where the Populist party had engaged in electoral fusion or other alliances with Republicans against the dominantBourbon Democrats.[31][32]

In the1936 and1940, theAmerican Labor Party nominatedFranklin Roosevelt for president, and in1944, theLiberal Party of New York cross-nominated Roosevelt, fusing with the ALP. Roosevelt won the state of New York in each election, but in 1940 and 1944 he would not have won New York without the support of votes gained via the fusion parties and their voters.[33]

Donald Trump appeared on the2016 presidential ballot in California with two ballot labels by his name,[34] as the nominee of both the Republican Party and theAmerican Independent Party, a small far-right party. Trump was the first fusion presidential candidate on the California ballot in at least eighty years.[35]

Connecticut

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Connecticut allows cross-endorsements, listing candidates on more than one ballot line. Minor parties include theWorking Families Party andIndependent Party. In 2010,Dannel Malloy won within the Working Families' margin.[36]

New York

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See also:Elections in New York (state) andQualified New York political parties

In 1936, labor leaders in New York City took advantage of fusion and founded the American Labor Party (ALP). Their immediate goal was to provide a way for New Yorkers who despised theTammany Hall political machine to support Franklin Roosevelt without voting for the Democratic Party. In its first showing at the polls, the party garnered a significant amount of the vote in New York City but was not important with regard to Roosevelt's victory. In the 1937 election cycle, the ALP built on it past performance by electing members to the city council, and by delivering so many votes to MayorFiorello La Guardia that theNew York Times ran a front page article declaring that the ALP held the balance of power in city and state politics. The importance of the ALP was demonstrated again in 1938 when the party provided the margin of victory for the Democratic candidate for Governor, and in 1940 when the ALP did the same for President Roosevelt. In the 1944 presidential election, fusion providedCIO unions in New York an opportunity to build and back a labor party, an uncommon occurrence in the US. Labor leaders knew that fusion permitted them to field candidates and win elections on the American Labor Party line in local elections, and to back Democrats in statewide or national races where they did not have the capacity to field successful candidates. Given the presence of fusion in New York, the Greater New York Industrial Union Council (GNYIUC), the CIO's local labor federation in New York, formally affiliated with the party making it the political arm of the New York CIO. This relationship would continue until 1948 when the GNYIUC opted to backHenry Wallace for president, instead of using fusion to back President Truman. This led to internal conflicts within the CIO and ultimately contributed to the decision by the national CIO to revoke the charter of the GNYIUC, thereby ending its relationship with the ALP.[12]

As of 2023, to obtain or maintain automatic ballot access, a party's candidate forGovernor inmidterm election years orPresident in presidential years must receive either 130,000 votes or 2% of votes cast (whichever is greater) on that party's line.[37]

Other parties, such as theLibertarian Party of New York and theGreen Party of New York, have sought ballot access by first getting a gubernatorial candidate on the ballot viapetition (by collecting 45,000 valid signatures ofregistered voters), and then by getting 130,000 votes for that candidate on their line. As a general rule, neither party uses electoral fusion, and both rely on their own candidates. The Green Party, which had first achieved ballot status in 1998, failed to gain 50,000 votes (then the requirement) and also lost its ballot status in 2002, but regained its line when the 2010 election results were certified. In 2018,Larry Sharpe, the Libertarian Party candidate for governor in New York, received over 90,000 votes, giving the party ballot status for the first time in its history.[38][39][40]

In July 2019, theNew York Legislature passed a budget bill that included the creation of a Public Campaign Financing Commission, which was given authority to investigate and create rules forpublic financing of campaigns.[41] TheConservative Party of New York and theWorking Families Party each filed lawsuits against the state in response, alleging that the commission was a disguised attempt to end fusion voting and thus the existence of New York's third parties.[42]

Oregon

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Prior to 1958, Oregon practiced a form of fusion that required the state to list multiple nominating parties on the candidate's ballot line.Sylvester Pennoyer was elected governor in 1886 and 1890 as a candidate of the Democratic and People's parties. In 1906, seven members of the Oregon House were also elected as candidates of thePeople's Party and either the Democratic or Republican parties. In 2008, a lawsuit was brought by theIndependent Party of Oregon against the Oregon Secretary of State claiming that modifications to the ballot design statute in 1995 once again required the state to list multiple nominating parties on the candidate's ballot line. The lawsuit gave rise to legislation[43][non-primary source needed] to allow candidates to list up to three party labels after their name. This bill passed both houses of the Oregon legislature during the 2009 legislative session. GovernorTed Kulongoski signed the bill into law on 23 July 2009.[44]

Pennsylvania

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In Pennsylvania, fusion can occur when members of a party write in the name of a member of a different party in a primary election and secure enough write-in votes to nominate that party's candidate. For example, if Bob Jones is running for school board in a primary election as a Democrat and secures both enough votes from members of his own party as well as enough write-in votes from members of the Republican Party, then electoral fusion occurs, and Bob will appear on the ballot as both a Republican and a Democrat. Similarly, a member of one party may lose their own party's nomination in a primary election but gain enough write-in votes from members of the opposing party to win that party's nomination. For example, in May 2023,Stephen Zappala lost the Democratic primary forAllegheny County District Attorney to challenger Matt Dugan. However, although Zappala is a Democrat, he received the requisite number (500 or more) of write-in votes from Republicans to appear as a Republican on the ballot in November 2023.[45][46] Running on the ballot as a Republican, Zappala won the general election in November 2023, beating Dugan.

Vermont

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In Vermont, candidates can only run in one party primary, but can run write-in campaigns in others. Political science professor Jack Gierzynski said "When parties work together in a fusion sense, they're much more likely to be successful. ... [Progressives] running on a fusion ticket has had a big influence on moving the public policy needle to the left."[47]

Fusion voting had been at risk due to asore loser provision ofranked-choice voting legislation.[48]

Wisconsin

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InMilwaukee,Wisconsin, during the heyday of thesewer socialists, the Republican and Democratic parties would agree not to run candidates against each other in some districts, concentrating instead on defeating the socialists. These candidates were usually callednon-partisan, but sometimes were termed fusion candidates instead.[49][additional citation(s) needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abMitchell, Maurice; Cantor, Dan (22 March 2019)."In Defense of Fusion Voting".The Nation.
  2. ^Abadi, Mark (8 November 2016)."This is why some candidates are listed more than once on your ballot".Business Insider.
  3. ^"What is Fusion"(PDF). Oregon Working Families Party. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 15 April 2012.
  4. ^"Brief for appellant: Twin Cities Area New Party vs Secretary of State of Minnesota". Public Citizen Foundation.
  5. ^"The Realistic Promise of Multiparty Democracy in the United States".New America. Retrieved30 October 2024.
  6. ^"Fusion Voting and Its Impact on the Upcoming Election".New York Law Journal. Retrieved30 October 2024.
  7. ^Hounshell, Blake (22 November 2022)."Does Fusion Voting Offer Americans a Way Out of the Partisan Morass?".The New York Times.
  8. ^Abadi, Mark."This is why some candidates are listed more than once on your ballot".Business Insider. Retrieved30 October 2024.
  9. ^abcCantor, Daniel; Kristol, William (15 June 2024)."What Is "Fusion Voting"? Just a Way to Save the Country, That's All".The New Republic.ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved16 June 2024.
  10. ^Brooks, Corey M. (2016).Liberty Power: Anstislavery third Parties and the Transformation of American Politics. University of Chicago Press. pp. 194–204.
  11. ^abcArgersinger, Peter H. (April 1980)."'A Place on the Ballot': Fusion Politics and Antifusion Laws".The American Historical Review.85 (2):287–306.doi:10.2307/1860557.ISSN 0002-8762.JSTOR 1860557.
  12. ^abEimer, S (2007)."The CIO and third party politics in New York: The rise and fall of the CIO–ALP".Political Power and Social Theory.18:133–171.doi:10.1016/s0198-8719(06)18004-7.ISSN 0198-8719.
  13. ^Malinowski, Tom (6 July 2022)."Opinion: A Viable Third Party Is Coming, and It's Starting With a New Jersey Lawsuit".The New York Times.
  14. ^Argersinger, Peter H. (1995).The Limits of Agrarian Radicalism: Western Populism and American Politics. University Press of Kansas.
  15. ^Sifry, Micah L. (2003).Spoiling for a Fight: Third-Party Politics in America. Routledge. pp. 227–228.ISBN 978-0415931434.
  16. ^Hunt, James L. (2006)."Fusion of Republicans and Populists".Encyclopedia of North Carolina, University of North Carolina Press.
  17. ^Tamas, Bernard (13 March 2018).The Demise and Rebirth of American Third Parties: Poised for Political Revival?. Routledge.ISBN 978-1-351-12825-4.
  18. ^"Codified Law 12-6-3.2".South Dakota Legislature.
  19. ^"Bill Detail - Delaware General Assembly".legis.delaware.gov.
  20. ^Collins, Jeffrey (2 March 2022)."South Carolina Voting changes unite Democrats, Republicans".AP News.
  21. ^"Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party (95–1608), 520 U.S. 351 (1997)". Legal Information Institute/Cornell. Retrieved4 January 2015.
  22. ^Cobble, Steve; Siskind, Sarah (1993).Fusion: Multiple Party Nomination in the United States. San Francisco: Center for a New Democracy at the Tides Foundation.
  23. ^Adams, Terrence (16 January 2013)."Cross-Endorsing Candidates".Connecticut General Assembly Office of Legislative Research. Retrieved25 February 2023.
  24. ^Greene, Rick (17 October 2022)."Your ballot might list the same candidate under two parties. That's allowed under N.H. law".New Hampshire Public Radio.
  25. ^Hounshell, Blake (21 November 2022)."Does Fusion Voting Offer Americans a Way Out of the Partisan Morass?".The New York Times. Retrieved25 February 2023.
  26. ^Osman Pérez Méndez (2 January 2024)."Dalmau cataloga candidatura de médico a comisionado residente como 'un acto de generosidad y desprendimiento'".Primera Hora (in Spanish). Retrieved26 July 2024.
  27. ^Metzger, Bryan (9 March 2021)."Independent voters surpass 20 percent, but lack representation. Lawmakers unswayed".New Mexico In Depth. Retrieved2 March 2025.
  28. ^"Bill S.424".malegislature.gov. Retrieved2 March 2025.
  29. ^"H5712".webserver.rilegislature.gov. Retrieved2 March 2025.
  30. ^Hale, William Harlan (1950). Horace Greeley: Voice of the People. Harper & Brothers.OCLC 336934. p. 338
  31. ^"African". History.missouristate.edu. Archived fromthe original on 7 March 2010. Retrieved2 July 2010.
  32. ^"Senate and House Secured; Republican control in the next Congress assured. The House of Representatives Republican by More than Two – thirds Majority – Possible Loss of a Republican Senator from the State of Washington – Republicans and Populists Will Organize the Senate and Divide the Patronage".The New York Times. 9 November 1894. Retrieved26 May 2010.
  33. ^Soyer, Daniel (2022).Left in the Center: The Liberal Party of New York and the Rise and Fall of American Social Democracy. Cornell University Press.
  34. ^Winger, Richard (13 August 2016)."American Independent Party Formally Nominates Donald Trump and Michael Pence".ballot-access.org. Retrieved31 August 2024.
  35. ^"Donald Trump will be the nominee of two parties on California's November ballot".Los Angeles Times. 16 August 2016. Retrieved31 August 2024.
  36. ^Pazniokas, Mark (4 November 2024)."CT 2024 election: Your legislator is on 2 or 3 ballot lines. Why?".CT Mirror. Retrieved1 March 2025.
  37. ^"Ballot access requirements for political parties in New York".Ballotpedia.
  38. ^"NYS Board of Elections Unofficial Election Night Results". Archived fromthe original on 20 November 2018. Retrieved23 January 2019.
  39. ^Welch, Matt (31 October 2018)."Libertarian Larry Sharpe Has Raised a Record $450,000 in New York Governor's Race".Reason.com. Retrieved30 October 2024.
  40. ^"Larry Sharpe Is Libertarian Candidate For Governor - Sanctuary For Independent Media". Retrieved30 October 2024.
  41. ^"Governor Cuomo & Legislative Leaders Announce Members of the Public Campaign Financing Commission".Governor Andrew M. Cuomo. 3 July 2019. Archived fromthe original on 2 August 2019. Retrieved2 August 2019.
  42. ^McKinley, Jesse (23 July 2019)."2 Opposing Political Parties, Fighting for Survival, Sue Cuomo".The New York Times.
  43. ^"SB326 2009 Regular Session".Oregon Legislative Information System.Archived from the original on 27 October 2020. Retrieved26 October 2024.
  44. ^"Tracking Senate Bill 326 in the Oregon Legislature".Your Government :: The Oregonian. Retrieved1 March 2025.
  45. ^Lyons, Kim (19 May 2023)."'Halftime?' Allegheny Co. Dem DA nominee Dugan may face Zappala again in November".Pennsylvania Capital-Star. Retrieved20 May 2023.
  46. ^"Zappala receives enough write-in votes to run as Republican".CBS News. 23 May 2023. Retrieved25 May 2023.
  47. ^Cutler, Calvin (25 August 2022)."Three Vt. Democratic primary winners to run as fusion candidates".WCAX. Retrieved1 March 2025.
  48. ^Viglienzoni, Cat (15 June 2023)."Vt. election reform bill could be taken up in veto session".WCAX. Retrieved1 March 2025.
  49. ^"Fusion In Many Districts; Old Parties Unite On Legislative Candidates"Milwaukee Journal 1 November 1918; p. 9, col. 2

Further reading

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External links

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