New Jersey is the only state in the U.S. that designs ballots by organizing candidates around a "county line" endorsed by party leadership, rather than grouping them by the office they are seeking. This system has been statistically shown to give endorsed incumbents a massive advantage, sometimes upwards of 30 percentage points, making it nearly impossible for grassroots challengers to win. Proponents argue it simplifies voting by clearly showing the party team. Opponents argue it is an unconstitutional form of voter suppression that keeps political machines in power.
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Based on 8 responses to this question.
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