Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

United Independent Party

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Founded
  
2014

Political position
  
Center to Centre-left

Seats in the Massachusetts Senate
  
0 / 40

Membership  (2015)
  
30,368

Colors
  
Blue & White

Ideology
  
Centrism, Progressivism, Social liberalism

The United Independent Party or "UIP" is a political party based in Massachusetts, United States. The chairperson of the UIP is Evan Falchuk, a former health care executive who submitted enough signatures to be on the 2014 gubernatorial ballot. When the party and Falchuk announced their intention to run in 2014, it billed itself as pragmatically progressive and fiscally sensible.

Contents

The party won more than 3% of the vote in the 2014 gubernatorial ballot and is now officially recognized in Massachusetts as a major party, alongside Democrats, Republicans, and the Green-Rainbow Party. Following the 2014 election, the party announced that it would seek to enroll 50,000 Massachusetts residents in the UIP by the end of 2015.

The UIP was spearheading an effort to have a referendum on the Boston bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics before the bid was withdrawn.

Falchuk has hinted that he will run for governor in 2018.

In November, 2016 the UIP lost official party status in Massachusetts.

In February 2017 party President Evan Falchuk left the UIP and joined the Democratic Party.

Establishment of official party status

Founded in 2014 as the United Independent Party, the party attained official political party status in the state of Massachusetts when founder Evan Falchuk ran for the 2014 Masschusetts gubernatorial election as Governor. Official political party status in Massachusetts affects how political groups can use finances, and official political parties are guaranteed ballot access. The Falchuk ticket received 3.33% of the vote in Massachusetts, where state law requires 3% during state and national elections for establishing and maintaining official party status. An alternate method to establish and maintain state party status in Massachusetts is to have over 1% of voters registered in their party, a threshold that the UIP has not met yet but is working towards.

2016 presidential primaries

Prior to the 2016 presidential primaries, Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William F. Galvin stated that officials had noted an “inexplicable increase’’ in new members of the United Independent Party, especially amongst casual voters who were registering for the first time or online (UIP membership grew from 1,867 in February 2015 to roughly 21,000 by the end the year). Galvin became concerned that many of these voters had accidentally enrolled in the party in the belief that they were registering as "unenrolled", commonly referred to as independent, and would be allowed to vote in either primary. In late January 2016, Galvin sent a letter to the 20,914 enrolled members of the party, informing them that they may have signed up incorrectly. By February 2, about 5,500 had switched from the United Independent Party to unenrolled. According to Falchuk, he had no problem with the letter sent out by the Secretary's office. He also stated that the UIP had also sent out its own emails and even encouraged members to change party identification in order to vote in the primaries and then change back later. Falchuk did take issue with Galvin's statement to WGBH radio, in which he remarked that voters had likely enrolled with the UIP by accident. Falchuk stated that he felt that this was "an elected official using his office not to educate voters ... but rather to say, ‘We don’t think you should be involved in that party.'" Galvin responded that he had an "obligation to make sure that voters have the ability to vote the way they want to vote... My concern is if these folks, and I’m speaking now particularly the ones who remain in his party and didn’t join it intentionally, if they go into the polls on March 1 and try to pull a Democratic or Republican ballot, they won’t be able to do it.”

UIP Registered Voter History

RV.= Registered Voters

References

United Independent Party Wikipedia