WFP’s Secret to Success:
Fusion Voting

Third parties aren’t too common in America, and there’s a reason why. Too often, voting for a third party candidate means casting your ballot for someone you know doesn’t have much hope of winning or, even worse, will hand a victory to the candidate you like the least (think Nader’s impact in Florida, 2000).

Not in New York. New York is one of the few states with “fusion” voting, which means one candidate can be endorsed by multiple parties. This gives voters a way to “vote their values” without spoiling an election.

Fusion lets third parties like the Working Families party demonstrate support for the issues we’re fighting for. When votes on the WFP’s line help a candidate win, they know it, and we can hold that politician accountable to working people, instead of special interests.

Take the Pledge: I’m voting for change and I mean it. I’m voting for WFP-endorsed candidates on the Working Families line – “Row E”

I pledge to vote Working Families

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More about Fusion Voting:

  • Open Ballot Voting, promoting fusion voting across the country.
  • Blog posts by Dan Cantor, Executive Director of the Working Families Party on fusion voting at Talking Points Memo Cafe.
  • Testimony of Adam Morse from the Brennan Center for Justice in favor of fusion.
  • Wikipedia article on electoral fusion.
  • A post by Scott Sheilds at the MyDD blog about fusion.
  • An excerpt Micah Sifry’s history of third parties Spoiling for a Fight.



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