The Purple Principle
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purpleprinciple.bsky.social
The Purple Principle
@purpleprinciple.bsky.social
The Purple Principle is an award-winning, pro-democracy, non-partisan podcast for independent-minded Americans exploring the perils of polarization in U.S. politics, society, and daily life. https://purpleprinciple.com
After tallying your votes, the top insight from The Purple Principle has been crowned! 🏆

🎉 And the winner is… @sarahlongwell25.bsky.social! 🎉

A big thank you to our voters & congrats, Sarah!

🙌 Check out the #rankedchoicevoting results & remaining prescient insights from the episode 🚀 #politics
January 14, 2025 at 8:19 PM
🤔Why is “the last best place” becoming polarized?

New episode: Frank Garner, former MT House member & Montanans for Election Reform board member, explains the root cause behind Montana's push for #electionreform & the solutions offered by CI126 & 127.

🎧 Tune in 👉 bit.ly/reformMT
#MontanaPolitics
January 9, 2025 at 6:34 PM
🎙️ Insight #10: @smerconish.bsky.social (2022) explained how political power shifted from political leaders to media figures, with Ted Cruz’s January 6th comment & conservative blowback as proof.

🗳️ Will this trend continue?

🎧Listen & rank 👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights
#Election2024 #PoliticalPower
December 13, 2024 at 8:26 PM
🎙️#9: @drtaniaisrael.bsky.social (2021) explained "affective polarization" - where political vitriol from the left & right starts to sound the same, and voters tune it out.

🗳️ Have you noticed this?

🎧 Listen & rank your fave insights this episode
👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights
#Election2024 #Polarization
December 13, 2024 at 7:45 PM
🎙️ Insight #8: Amy Chua (2022) shared how tribalism played a key role in Trump’s rise, highlighting how “market-dominant minorities” like coastal elites spark backlash.

Listen & rank your fave #politicalinsights from our recent episode! 👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights

#Election2024 #PoliticalTribalism
December 12, 2024 at 9:41 PM
🎙️ Insight #7: @chrisbail.bsky.social (2021) explained how social media fuels political polarization & extremism, amplifying extreme voices while muting moderates.

🗳️ Do you see social media driving extremism?
(Hello Bluesky 😉)

🎧 Listen: bit.ly/TPPinsights
#SocialMedia #Polarization #Election2024
December 12, 2024 at 9:34 PM
🌍 Insight #6: Joel Kotkin (2022) discussed CA’s population shift, with many right-leaning Californian's moving to red/purple states.

That trend is impacting elections, like Sen. Jon Testor's recent loss in Montana.

🔗Listen & rank your fave 👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights
#CaliforniaImpact #Election2024
December 12, 2024 at 9:21 PM
🎙️#5: Carlos Curbelo (2022) predicted #Latinovoters would swing to the GOP. Despite anti-immigration rhetoric, issues like jobs, the economy, & #education matter most.

🗳️ Did the GOP win them over, or did Dems miss the mark?👇

🎧 Listen & rank your fave bit.ly/TPPinsights
#Election2024 #Politics
December 11, 2024 at 8:31 PM
🎙️#4: @tombedsall.bsky.social (2021) argued Dems shifted from the party of the working class (FDR, Truman, Kennedy) to the upscale, alienating white & minority voters with conservative leanings.

🎧 Listen & rank your fave #TPPinsights here 👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights
#Election2024 #PoliticalInsights
December 11, 2024 at 8:28 PM
🎙️#3: @sarahlongwell25.bsky.social (2022) explored how language from the left may alienate moderate voters, & how political views can be shaped by what feels close to us (e.g. Jan 6th).

What do you think?

🎧 Listen & rank your faves 👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights
#PoliticalLanguage #Election2024 #TPPinsights
December 11, 2024 at 8:11 PM
🎙️#2: @jayvanbavel.bsky.social (2020) on why voting across party lines is rare: party identity is core to who we are & abandoning it feels like a threat.

🎧 Listen to all 10 insights & rank your faves by Friday:
👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights
#Polarization #Election2024 #PoliticalIdentity
December 10, 2024 at 8:49 PM
🔍 We dug up 10 prescient TPP insights explaining the election & politics today:

🎙️ #1: in Feb 2024, @sykescharlie.bsky.social explained why centrist voters were key to the election & how the GOP has strayed from its conservative roots🤔

🎧 Listen to all 10 & rank your faves
👉 bit.ly/TPPinsights
December 10, 2024 at 6:03 PM
New Episode Alert!🚨

The #2024Elections caught many pundits off guard. So we dove into our 100+ interviews for insights explaining key #political dynamics in play.

We picked 10 & we want to hear from you! Listen & rank your top 5 here 👉 bit.ly/TPP-insights

#politics #politicalnews #government
November 22, 2024 at 7:11 PM
🎙️New episode!🌟

Learn from Andrew Yang on how election reform will play a major role in 2024 & beyond.

Plus, Yang shares how $200 million- less than some Senate campaigns- could transform American politics.

Episode 👉 bit.ly/YangS4Ep21
#AndrewYang #yanggang #Politics #electionreform #elections2024
November 1, 2024 at 6:37 PM
US Politics:
✅ Lack of trust in politics
✅ Feeling unheard by politicians
✅ Deep political polarization

🤔 What if a $200 million investment could change that?
bit.ly/YangS4Ep21

#AndrewYang #Politics #YangGang #forwardparty #ElectionReform #elections2024
Transforming US Politics for $200 Million? Andrew Yang on Election Reform
"You meet them and you're like, ‘oh, wow, you're a good person trying to do the right thing, and there's nothing in it for you,’” says Andrew Yang, Founder and Co-Chair of the Forward Party. He’s referring to largely volunteer teams around the country that have raised the profile for election reform in 2024. “I mean, what could be more worthy of praise than that combination of attributes?” Yang was a relative unknown upon entering the 2020 Democratic Presidential primaries. But that did not last long. He energized young voters with his informal approach to campaigning and practical position on innovative policies, such as universal basic income. “The reason I do what I do is because I don't have that positive an outlook as to what America's future looks like if we don't get our s%%# together,” says Yang, also an author and frequent commentator on major news networks. “Like it or not, the world's future is determined very much by what happens here in the United States.” Tune in to find out why Yang and the Forward Party support election reform in all its variations for 2024 and beyond. And why $200 million dollars spent on election reform, which is less than that spent on several Senate campaigns this year, could transform American politics for the better. The Purple Principle is a Fluent Knowledge production. Original music by Ryan Adair Rooney. @andrewyang @ForwardParty
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November 1, 2024 at 6:30 PM
1) 🎉Exciting news!🎉Our short video, People Vs Politics - The DC Effort, feat @lisadtrice.bsky.social & Kenyatta Smith of Make All Votes Count DC won the 2024 #W3Awards for:

🥇News & Politics

🙌Special thx to all involved👇 bit.ly/PvP-DC
#electionreform #PeopleVsPolitics #politicstoday
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October 3, 2024 at 7:36 PM
2) Link to the @W3Awards and our team for this video: bit.ly/w3winner

Also pictured below 👏🎬
October 3, 2024 at 7:35 PM
(1/3) Can you name the state legislature elected differently from all others?

In 2022, the frontier state of #Alaska first used a top four election system combining unified primaries with #rankedchoicevoting. Did this change the Alaska legislature? We interviewed...

bit.ly/AlaskaPt1
Frontiers of Election Reform: 5 Views on the Alaska Legislature (Part One)
“The notion of getting rid of a closed primary system in Alaska appealed to me instantly,” says former Alaska House Speaker Bryce Edgmon who has represented Bristol Bay and parts of the Aleutian Islands for nearly two decades. “It overrode right there almost on the spot any trepidation I might have about having to rank candidates or anything else that would eventually become part of the ballot measure that narrowly passed in Alaska.” Rep. Edgmon is referring to Alaska’s first-in-nation passage of a final or top four voting system with a unified open primary plus ranked choice general election. In this episode we examine the dynamics of the first state legislature in the country to have been elected by this system in 2022, even as a ballot measure to repeal the system has been put before Alaska voters in 2024. We also discuss the dynamics of the Alaska legislature with Anchorage Daily News Reporter, Iris Samuels, and University of Alaska Southeast Political Science Professor, Dr. Glenn Wright. “Alaska is fairly unique in that even before this election reform, we've had bipartisan and tri-partisan coalitions in the House and Senate,” says Samuels, who covers the Juneau State House. “But it has reinforced that phenomenon and made it possible for elected officials to envision doing that and not experience repercussions from within their party and from voters.” “If you talk to incumbent politicians,” explains Dr. Wright, “ they will tell you that they're less concerned about the primary challenge now– that before the reform that was in the back of their mind. And they were thinking not about what do voters in my district want but what do party primary voters in my district want.” AFL-CIO President Joelle Hall has also observed what might be a similar deepening of Alaska’s cross-partisan tendencies in the two years since passage of the top four reform. “One of the ways that we are really different is that we have always come to a bipartisan coalition at the end of every decade,” observes Hall, a legislative lobbyist for nearly three decades. “Redistricting happens. Then slowly the two parties claw back to roughly even. So it's accelerated what is already a normal path in Alaska where we gravitate towards these coalitions. But our final guest on this first of two Alaska episodes, Rep. Alyse Galvin of Anchorage, cautions that these post reform dynamics have not yet translated into legislative action. That’s partially because senior house leadership has blocked several bipartisan legislative efforts, while others were vetoed at the executive level. “if we don't allow this to play out a bit more, I'd say one more cycle, maybe two,” says Galvin, previously a two time candidate for the US House, ”then we're really missing a big chance to get things done that will give Alaskans hope.” Tune in for five different perspectives on the first legislature in the country elected by final or top four voting as citizens in four other US states (NV, ID, CO & MT) consider passing the Alaskan model for less divisive elections toward more collaborative governance. The Purple Principle is a Fluent Knowledge production. Original music by Ryan Adair Rooney. For more information on this episode including transcript, show notes, and resources, please visit: https://fluentknowledge.com/podcasts/alaska-legislature-5-views-part1/
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September 26, 2024 at 2:25 PM
(2/3) 5 experts: Former Speaker & current Rep. Bryce Edgmon sees moderation; Reporter Iris Samuels & Dr. Glenn Wright talk coalitions; Joelle Hall of AFL-CIO outlines the lobbyist challenge; Anchorage Rep. Alyse Galvin says more time and elections are needed to gauge full effects.
September 26, 2024 at 2:24 PM
(3/3) Listen and let us know what you think! #Podcast now available wherever you get your podcasts and linked in post (1/3).
👉 #ElectionReform #openprimaries #RankedChoiceVoting #vote2024 #alaskapolitics #AKLeg #AlaskaVotes #AlaskaNews
September 26, 2024 at 2:22 PM
We the people, right? When ballot measures pass, the people have spoken... or maybe not.

#Colorado legislature passed an amendment before citizens vote, delaying it until 2028.

Watch our 2-min video & let us know what you think! bit.ly/CObestof #politics #electionreform #rankedchoicevoting
Legislative Meddling Around Colorado's Top Four Ballot Measure? (Video Highlights)
Election reform is officially on the ballot for voter approval in Colorado this year. This 'Top Four' voting system is similar to the Alaska model of a unified #openprimary plus #rankedchoicevoting general election. But there is a catch to this Colorado ballot measure, and it came via the state legislature in the final moments of the 2024 session. The amendment in question requires at least 12 Colorado municipalities to pass and implement ranked choice voting elections before the state can do so. Thus it could delay citizen will on this issue until at least 2028, even if voters overwhelmingly pass the initiative in November. Take in three differing perspectives in this 'Best Of Podcast Video' featuring: (1) Jeni Arndt: nonpartisan Mayor of For Collins, Colorado, former 3-term House Member (2) Barbara Kirkmeyer: Colorado State Senator; District 23 (3) Chris Hansen: Colorado State Senator; District 31 📜✅ Follow our channel for updates on nonpartisan state level election reform efforts this year. Shorts and highlights also link to longer audio-only podcasts, available here on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. #politics #VotingReform #openprimaries"
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September 19, 2024 at 7:05 PM
"Top Four" #electionreform is on the #Colorado ballot this Nov, but a last minute amendment could delay implementation even if voters approve. New episode w/ 3 perspectives: Fort Collins Mayor Jeni Arndt & Senators Chris Hansen & Barbara Kirkmeyer #openprimaries #rankedchoicevoting
bit.ly/COtopfour
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September 11, 2024 at 7:35 PM
New #podcast episode on 1st-in-the-nation #Oregon! OR House Member Dan Rayfield & OregonRCV's Mike Alfoni recount #rankedchoicevoting passage thru OR legislature & onto the ballot. Follow their campaign & our YouTube for more state-level election reform efforts this year.
bit.ly/OregonRCV
New Oregon Trail for Ranked Choice Voting? From Farmer's Market to Legislature & Citizen Ballot
"I've sat in rooms where we as Democrats have high-fived when a Libertarian party candidate gets into a competitive race,” recalls former Oregon House Speaker Dan Rayfield. “That's not democracy.” “And Republicans high-five when a Green Party candidate gets into the race,” says Rayfield, currently running for Attorney General in Oregon. “That's not democracy.” Dan Rayfield is describing the spoiler effect of plurality voting, where a third party candidate with minimal support can determine the election outcome. Rayfield joined forces with Oregon-based campaign manager, Mike Alfoni, to do something about that spoiler effect. Namely, to promote ranked choice voting (RCV) first at the county and then the state level. “I love the impossible, which is why I did this in the first place,” says Alfoni with reference to the legislature’s recent passage of RCV for state and federal elections. Oregon is the first state in the country to do so. “And because everyone told me we couldn't do this, and then we did it anyway.” How did Rayfield and Alfoni blaze this Oregon trail for RCV? It took many years of patient effort in and outside the legislature, such as building a supporting network of community groups. And it took compromise, such as agreeing to remove state level legislature elections at the request of County Clerks. Tune in to hear more about first-in-the-nation Oregon, the prospects there for citizen ballot passage in November, and whether this Oregon trail could be followed by other reform leaders and legislatures around the country seeking to depolarize our politics. The Purple Principle is a Fluent Knowledge production; original music by Ryan Adair Rooney.
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August 28, 2024 at 7:28 PM
Learn about Nevada’s election reform Question 3 (#openprimaries #rankedchoicevoting general election) in our new episode w/ Veteran Doug Goodman of Nevadans for Election Reform, Dr. Sondra Cosgrove of Vote Nevada & Cesar Marquez of Move Nevada Forward. bit.ly/NVreform
Three Election Reformers Approach The Finish Line: Will Nevada Adopt the Alaska Model?
In 2024, Nevada voters will see a ballot Question 3 strikingly similar to the question on Final Five voting from 2022. That’s because a constitutional amendment must be passed by voters twice in succession, according to Nevada law. And should voters approve Question 3 again this year, Nevada will become the second state (after Alaska) to implement this ambitious electoral voting reform system including a unified open primary and ranked choice general election. “After we won,” recalls Cesar Marquez of Nevada’s first passage of Final Five Voting in 2022, “Sondra, Doug, and I and so many others, we felt, okay, we now have two years to talk about ranked choice voting.” A former Tesla Engineer, Marquez is referring to his colleagues Doug Goodman of Nevadans for Election Reform and Dr. Sondra Cosgrove of Vote Nevada. In this episode, we learn how Goodman, a retired military veteran, began working on election reform in the Silver State a decade ago. Initially, Goodman lobbied extensively for legislative action before pivoting to the ballot initiative process. He recalls: “One of the questions I was posing to business leaders at the time was, if you had a more open electoral system, could that be a tiebreaker if a company was considering moving to Nevada?” Dr. Sonda Cosgrove, a history professor at Southern Nevada College, soon joined Goodman in that effort. She had noticed an alarming and counterintuitive trend in her efforts at Vote Nevada. Yes, more voters were registering to vote. But they were not voting in larger numbers. “And so we started realizing that they were being turned off right at the get-go in the primary,” says Cosgrove.” That's when... they were just kind of opting out.” Marquez joined forces with Goodman and Cosgrove to place Final Five Voting on that 2022 ballot. But he came at political reform from a very different direction. “The first thing I'll say is that I never liked politics, I still don't like politics,” admits Marquez. “ My background is in engineering, and I've worked in manufacturing for my whole career.” What do a military veteran, academic historian and engineer turned reformer have in common? Is ranked choice voting best demonstrated by a “rank the drink” event in English or “rank the taco” evening in Spanish? The Purple Principles discusses these and other election reform questions in this latest episode of our season-long state election reform series. We began in Idaho then traveled to Washington DC, Alaska, South Dakota and Arizona, before landing here in Nevada. The Purple Principle is a Fluent Knowledge production. Original music by Ryan Adair Rooney. #rankedchoicevoting #openprimaries
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August 14, 2024 at 8:06 PM
New episode now available! Listen & learn how voter equality is central to the #openprimaries effort in #Arizona. Episode features Paul Johnson & Chuck Coughlin of Make Elections Fair AZ w/ commentary from John Opdycke of Open Primaries. #electionreform

youtu.be/RiIkNoz7vKk
How About Treating All Voters & Candidates the Same! With Make Elections Fair AZ
“Everybody likes to think about these reforms as being revolutionary,” says Paul Johnson, former Mayor of Phoenix, now Co-Chair of Make Elections Fair AZ, on the record number of state level election reforms in play this year. “They’re not. City governments have been doing these reforms for about 50 to 60 years.” Johnson, a former Democrat turned Independent, is leading a third attempt at opening primary elections in Arizona to independent and unaffiliated voters through a 2024 citizen ballot initiative that also amends the state constitution to allow ranked choice general elections. He’s joined in this effort by GOP strategist Chuck Coughlin, a veteran of hundreds of candidate and issue campaigns in the Grand Canyon state and now treasurer at Make Elections Fair AZ. “The very basis of our thinking is that if you're going to use taxpayer money to run an election,” says Coughlin, “you have to treat every voter the same. You have to treat every candidate the same. I mean, that is a principle part of our American jurisprudence and the way we govern ourselves.” A Measured Approach In this episode, we learn how Johnson and Coughlin initially hoped to pursue the Alaska election Final Five Voting model of a unified open primary plus ranked choice general election. Ultimately, they decided on a measured approach with higher probability of success. “We did five statewide surveys trying to see if we could get that done, which would be a Final Five open primary, " says Coughlin. “I concluded in June of last year that that was not possible.... Paul and his colleagues came back and said, ‘Hey, we just want to do an open primary.’” Listen to the episode as Chuck and Paul share the data behind their incremental approach to election reform. Past Rivals Work Together We also hear how two political rivals (Paul & Chuck) joined forces in advocating for more sensible elections and pragmatic representation in the highly polarized state of Arizona. “I always liked to tease Chuck that the only job that he had in the governor's office was to destroy my career,” says Paul Johnson of two Gubernatorial campaign losses to candidates supported by Coughlin. “And he likes to tease me back, he did a pretty good job.” Is this the year Arizona voters embrace the principle of treating all voters and candidates the same in their elections? If so, this Arizona amendment could precede further general election reform via the legislature or citizen ballot process. Opening party-run primaries could even happen in the near term. This episode is part of our season-long non partisan election reform series. Previous episodes have visited Washington DC, Idaho and South Dakota. Upcoming episodes travel to Nevada, Colorado and Alaska. The Purple Principle is a Fluent Knowledge production. Original music by Ryan Adair Rooney.
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July 31, 2024 at 7:48 PM