The passage of Proposition 14 changed the way that elections are conducted for all statewide offices in California (including the
governor and other executive positions, members of the
State Legislature, and members of the
State Board of Equalization), as well as for
United States Senators and members of the
United States House of Representatives. Proposition 14 does not affect the election of
president and
vice president of the United States, local offices, or non-partisan offices such as judges and the Superintendent of Public Instruction. Instead of allowing each
political party to hold a
partisan primary open to just its members (and
independent voters, if the party chooses to do so) to determine its candidate for the
general election, Proposition 14 proposed to create a single primary ballot that would be identical for all voters. All candidates running in the primary election, regardless of their political party preference (if any), would appear on that ballot. The two candidates with the most votes would then qualify for the general election, regardless of which party they identify with (if any). The provisions of Proposition 14 do not apply to
presidential primaries, leaving presidential primaries as
semi-closed whereby voters can register with any party up to two weeks prior to election day, or at the polling place, to vote in the presidential primary of the party of their choice. As of the
2024 presidential primary, three political parties in California (the
California Democratic Party, the
California Libertarian Party, and the
American Independent Party) allow
voters who are not registered with any party to vote in their party's presidential primaries. However, the voters not registered with any party must specifically request a ballot for one of those parties in order to vote in those parties' presidential primaries. ==Results==