A nationwide push to use ranked choice voting is underway and the first shots have already been let loose. Only recently, the first state system was fully authorized after voters in Maine, for the second time, backed instituting ranked choice voting statewide. That first-in-the-nation voting law has changed the national debate. Now that debate has taken Utah by storm. From an article by in Utah’s Daily Herald:
Four Utah County cities are considering whether to participate in an experimental way of conducting elections — with ranked-choice voting. This relatively new system, which has been deployed in Maine and a handful of cities across the nation, is touted as a way to ensure the winning candidate has a majority of votes without having to go through the time, money and effort of holding a runoff election.
The system may seem complicated at first, but it seems like it may benefit voters and boost engagement at the polls — especially if voters pay careful attention to their ballots.
Read that full article here. But for America’s army of local, state and federal election workers, election judges, election clerk, and poll workers, what will a switch to a new system mean? At the end of this article, you can watch a video published on YouTube by the Washington State Association of County Auditors from a recent conference held in Davenport, Washington. The June 14th presentation is meant to teach you about the challenges and solutions faced during the administration of ranked choice voting in state and local settings. According to Democracy Chronicles’ friends at at the nonpartisan nonprofit FairVote, an organization with its headquarters in Takoma Park, Maryland:
Ranked choice voting (RCV) makes democracy more fair and functional. It works in a variety of contexts. It is a simple change that can have a big impact. With ranked choice voting, voters can rank as many candidates as they want in order of choice. Candidates do best when they attract a strong core of first-choice support while also reaching out for second and even third choices. When used as an “instant runoff” to elect a single candidate like a mayor or a governor, RCV helps elect a candidate that better reflects the support of a majority of voters. When used as a form of fair representation voting to elect more than one candidate like a city council, state legislature or even Congress, RCV helps to more fairly represent the full spectrum of voters.
The presentation includes a discussion with election experts Chris Hughes and Karen Brinson Bell, PMP. Bell is an Elections Administration and Ranked Choice Voting Project Consultant based out of Charleston, South Carolina and working with the Ranked Choice Voting Resource Center. According to Bell’s LinkedIn Account, she is:
…a multifaceted leader and certified project manager with more than 11 years of experience implementing and administering voter registration processes and voting equipment systems for federal, state, county, and municipal elections. More than twenty years of professional experience in departmental and regional project management, training development and facilitation, public relations, event planning, and sales in industries including elections, non-profit, and real estate.
On the other hand, Chris Hughes is a Staff Attorney at FairVote where he:
…focuses on ranked choice voting at the local and state levels, with an eye towards national implementation. He has studied and worked on voting rights, electoral reform, and civil rights, working for structural reforms to electoral systems and litigation to enforce voting and other civil rights.
Chris graduated with a B.A. in International Studies from the University of Miami in May 2012 and received his J.D. from New York University School of Law in 2015. He interned at the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities and the ACLU Voting Rights Project while in law school.
The video is about 60 minutes. Take a look:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kMal9BBFQE
Leave a Reply