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RandySF

(85,174 posts)
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 08:56 PM Tuesday

Independents Continue To Gain In Voter Registration Numbers

Since last September, more than 67,000 residents have added their names to the Pennsylvania voter rolls.

And nearly 70 percent of them did not choose a party affiliation.

The ranks of the independents continue to grow across the Commonwealth with nearly 46,000 choosing “no affiliation” over the last six months when registering to vote in “America’s Swing State.”

Among the two major parties, Democrats seem to have stemmed the tide in voter registration losses by signing up nearly 14,700 new voters, while Republicans snagged another 9,500.




https://www.politicspa.com/independents-continue-to-gain-in-voter-registration-numbers/146085/

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Independents Continue To Gain In Voter Registration Numbers (Original Post) RandySF Tuesday OP
This, frankly, is good news Metaphorical Tuesday #1
I disagree. everyonematters Tuesday #2
It's the narcissist vote. Independents are like a line from the musical 1776. AZLD4Candidate Wednesday #3
You can look down on them if you want. They are going to be deciding elections for the everyonematters Wednesday #4
unenlightened self-interest at the cost of the country does not impress me at all AZLD4Candidate Wednesday #5
I agree, with a caveat Metaphorical Saturday #6

Metaphorical

(2,654 posts)
1. This, frankly, is good news
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 09:08 PM
Tuesday

Independents tend to be apathetic voters normally, one reason why, despite being a growing class relative to the established parties, they do not tend to have as big an impact as they could. When they are actively signing up to vote, however, it means that they are pissed, and more than likely that they are pissed at Trump. I think this is going to end up being a big shock to pollsters this time around, because indies also tend to be undersampled in polls.

everyonematters

(4,205 posts)
2. I disagree.
Tue Apr 14, 2026, 09:14 PM
Tuesday

Independents are growing because of dissatisfaction with both parties where they are going back and forth between elections.

AZLD4Candidate

(6,831 posts)
3. It's the narcissist vote. Independents are like a line from the musical 1776.
Wed Apr 15, 2026, 08:37 PM
Wednesday

You cool, considerate men. You always hang to the rear of everything so if something goes down, you can remain afloat!

Independent voters are only moved, for the most part, by selfishness and "what's in it for me" mentality when they go to vote.

everyonematters

(4,205 posts)
4. You can look down on them if you want. They are going to be deciding elections for the
Wed Apr 15, 2026, 09:18 PM
Wednesday

foreseeable future. I don't agree with your characterization at all. There are a lot of people who are struggling economically. It has been that way for past few decades. They have given up trust in either of the parties to make a difference. The Democrats have nibbled around the edges but have not done anything major such as raising the minimum wage. That's why the independents are growing, and Trump's approval rating is plummeting, but the Democrats are not gaining. Yes, we are winning the special elections by good margins. The polls indicate that they are voting with us as a check on Trump, not because they have confidence in us.

AZLD4Candidate

(6,831 posts)
5. unenlightened self-interest at the cost of the country does not impress me at all
Wed Apr 15, 2026, 09:27 PM
Wednesday

It's amazing that our body politic has come down to people who only care about themselves and nothing else.

Metaphorical

(2,654 posts)
6. I agree, with a caveat
Sat Apr 18, 2026, 06:18 PM
Saturday

This is a challenge that the Democrats have to face, because the pendulum can swing back in the other direction just as quickly.

My contention is that what is happening now is largely due to regionalism coming in conflict with population densities. NE, SE, Inland Sea (Great Lakes), Upper Mountain, Lower Mountain, West Coast (and even within that SW vs. NW). Each sector is increasingly acting like a separate country - different economic drivers, different cultural and religious backgrounds, increasingly different ground rules and moral structures.

Add into this the fact that the GOP has, since the early 1970s, defined itself more cohesively as an ingroup, something that has only sharpened since 2000, while the Democrats have usually defined themselves as being what the Republicans aren't. That's a precarious place to be, especially since that means that you have more factions contending for power and representation on the Democratic side. Moreover, those factions also tend to form fairly amorphous clusters.

This means that you get reactive politics. Every time you get someone like a Trump or GW Bush in power, that coalition comes together, but it's weak when there is no clear policy or agenda, and defining one is hard when you have the regional biases to contend with. Once in power the GOP also does it's usually trick of gerrymandering, which usually results in an arms race like what's happening this year. That only makes the regional divides stronger.

Additionally we have the city mouse/country mouse divide. Cities by definition have higher populations but smaller areas, and in a geography-oriented political system, that tends to give the country mouse undue influence in comparison to their numbers. That distinction is becoming more stark - by all indications, the low-population-density areas are becoming even emptier compared to the large and mid-sized cities (fewer towns, more urban centers). There's comparatively little common ground between those two viewpoints.

Finally, social media and the end of geofencing is having the impact of siloing people by specific beliefs rather than working towards a common goal; in terms of my field of ontologies - local ontologies are increasingly reasserting themselves compared to global ones.

This means that characterising independent voters is disingenous; it only means that their self-identification is along terms that are increasingly not meant by either of the major parties exclusively, but our current political environment really has no room for a third path.

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