Apparently anyone in Hawai`i who wants to can vote in both the
Democratic and Republican Presidential Caucuses according to the
rules of each party.
The Republicans will caucus next Tuesday, March 8, and the
Democratic caucus is on Saturday March 26th and the rules for each
party say that anyone can register to vote, join the party and vote-
all at the election site on the day of the party's caucus.
In other words someone can join the Republican party and vote this
coming Tuesday in the Republican caucus and then turn around and join
the Democratic party and vote again in the Democratic caucus 18 days
later.
Hawai`i is a "no party registration" state where joining
a political party is a matter under the control of the parties, not
the state. You cannot be a "registered" anything- not a
Democrat, a Green, a Republican, a Libertarian or any other party.
The "tradition" has been that anyone who wants to join a
party must sign a party's "card" to become a member and
then remains a member until they sign a different party's "card."
But each party determines who, how and when members vote in their
presidential caucuses which are run by the parties with no regulation
by the state.
This year, according to each party, as in the past if you show up
and are a registered voter- or register to vote at the caucus- you
can simply "sign the card" for that party and vote in the
caucus. There are no limits on how long you have to have been- or
remain- a member.
The Democratic Party will send 34 delegates to the national
convention in July, 25 of whom will be determined at the caucus and
nine of whom who are "Superdelegates" who can vote for any
candidate. Superdelegates include Gov. David Ige, US Senator Brian
Schatz, US Senator Mazie Hirono, US Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, US Rep. Mark
Takai and four party leaders.
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