Like, if you're a sitting member of Congress and you vote against your party's nominee to leadership, that's a problem. And, I guess, if you're a sitting member of Party A who routinely votes in the Party B primary, that looks fucking weird.
But if your Joe Shitkicker, you're not really involved in the party operations. The party you caucus with in the primary is incidental to its operation. Your general election vote even more so.
In a real political party, that'd probably be a requirement made by the party, not a legal requirement tho
Sort of a moot point in a secret ballot.
Like, if you're a sitting member of Congress and you vote against your party's nominee to leadership, that's a problem. And, I guess, if you're a sitting member of Party A who routinely votes in the Party B primary, that looks fucking weird.
But if your Joe Shitkicker, you're not really involved in the party operations. The party you caucus with in the primary is incidental to its operation. Your general election vote even more so.