Fewer than 2 million of Ohioâs nearly 8 million registered voters are expected to cast ballots in today's primary election. And many of those who do get ballots will find just issues -- no candidatesâ names -- on them. A new organization Ohio voters pushing to change that. Technically, Ohio has no independent voters. It has nonpartisan voters â people who have never asked for a party ballot in a primary and are content in those spring elections to vote only on issues. Once they pull a Democratic or Republican ballot, they belong to that party. Cynthia Capathios moved to Canton from New York by way of California. She now heads a group called Independent Ohio and she says she got involved because she was tired of being left out says she isnât willing to sign up and is tired of feeling left out. âIt wasnât that I was a little bit of one and a little bit of another. It was more that they really fully didnât represent me, and I felt that we needed to do something different, something news.â? So whatâs she looking for? âA different of a system that isnât so overwhelmingly dictated by the parties. Weâre not against parties and weâre not against people being in the parties but against them being the arbitrators and being able to run the show. The political power is more in their hands than in the hands of the voters.â? She says that would include an open, nonpartisan primary, in which the top two vote-getters have a runoff. âThat would be really opening up the field.â? She acknowledges Ohioâs lawmakers may not be receptive to that, so, âI think this could come to a referendum in Ohio and voters could vote it in. Actually how it happened in California.â? But sheâs not passing petitions yet. âI donâtâ think that enough people know about it yet. I think we need to bring more awareness to it so when we do get to that point, the people will understand it better and wonât be scared off of it, because I do think that the powers that are in place right now arenât going to be thrilled by having it changed.â? Part of that awareness is informational picketing the group has planned for the Ohio Secretary of Stateâs office tomorrow, primary election day. âThe secretary of state is the one who has a lot of power over the elections and so ⦠we are working to make ourselves visible to him, to our legislators, to all voters. âI think independents are a big part of our voters. Nationally, 42 percent identify as independent, according to a Gallup Poll that was done in January 2014. At the last gubernatorial election, 68 percent of the voters in Ohio were unaffiliated. These are huge numbers. And we are kind of invisible.â? Thatâs Cynthia Carpathios of a group called Independent Ohio. The group is affiliated with a national organization called independentvoting.org.