User talk:2603:8001:2902:64F4:1983:15C9:68D4:88BC

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Nonpartisan elections[edit]

Yes, LA County elections are nonpartisan, but there's a reason that we place "Nonpartisan" in the election box and infobox and it's to show that they're nonpartisan. The LA mayor races' infoboxes are color coded to the polls, not to any political organizations or parties. reppoptalk 20:55, 21 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Also, not all in California are nonpartisan, especially the higher offices of statewide officeholders like governor or for the State Senate/Assembly. reppoptalk 20:57, 21 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]
So all California elections are nonpartisan including governor there can be 2 candidate with the same political party's also when you add colors people will confuse it with political parties and will add political party's as a good deed so there no need to add colors or party's we don't want to re add political party's if you have questions please reply back 2603:8001:2902:64F4:1983:15C9:68D4:88BC (talk) 23:56, 21 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]
First of all, not all California elections are nonpartisan. Higher offices state political parties that they identify with. They have a top-two system. Second, I personally didn't add the colors (and I don't really like it), but they're still nonpartisan (which are grey and shouldn't confuse anyone, especially when they have "Nonpartisan" as the party), that's why we put "Nonpartisan" and don't remove them. Check any other elections in Washington and Hawaii which do the same thing. reppoptalk 01:35, 22 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]
And I see you've reverted everything. 01:35, 22 September 2022 (UTC)
You also can't cite Wikipedia within Wikipedia, see WP:CIRCULAR: "Do not use articles from Wikipedia (whether English Wikipedia or Wikipedias in other languages) as sources since Wikipedia is considered as a user-generated source." But even then, the words "nonpartisan" is regulated to local elections within California. California usesa Nonpartisan blanket primary, which means that people of all parties run in the same primary instead of their own before the top two compete. reppoptalk 04:54, 22 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]