Bill actually has the whole thing backwards, as do most of the people out their in the political world. It is not my job to vote for a specific party. It is my job to vote for a party. Is is the party's job to run a candidate that I can vote for. If you haven't done that, you haven't earned my vote plain and simple.
If you are not satisfied with the candidate that your party has produced, then you have a decision to make. First, you can vote for that nominee because you feel obligated to do so, or because you feel bullied into it. Please don't do that. Second, you can vote for that candidate because you think that your party's nominee, although flawed is better than the alternative. Third, you can vote for a third party candidate who represents your beliefs. The final option is that you can abstain from the vote which is entirely respectable, if you feel that is the best option.
I, for one, will go the third party option. I will not vote for Trump or Hillary. We don't owe our parties anything. It is their job to select good candidates that we can vote for, and when the primary voters from both parties give us choices like they have this year, I worry for our country. The voters have spoken and the voters have moved my party to a place that I will not be in, that I cannot be in. So I will have to be in a different place this year.
I will be voting for Darrell Castle of the Constitution Party this year, assuming his name is on the ballot. I thought about going Libertarian, and then they nominated Johnson. I am not a big fan.
I don't really care who you vote for. I don't even care if you vote. But if you do vote, inform yourself and vote your conscience.