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posted by martyb on Thursday April 19 2018, @10:34AM   Printer-friendly
from the democracy dept.

Common Dreams reports

Election reform advocates on [April 18] praised a decision by Maine's Supreme Court, upholding the use of ranked-choice voting for the state's upcoming primary elections, saying the ruling demonstrated that the court heeded the demands of Maine voters.

[...]Unlike in traditional voting, in which the candidate with the largest share of votes wins--even if he or she is far from capturing a majority of the support--in ranked choice voting, voters rank each candidate in order of preference. If no candidate has a majority after the first count, the least-popular contender is eliminated, voters' ballots are added to the totals of their second-ranked candidates, and the ballots are recounted. The eliminations and recounts continue until one candidate has a majority.

Supporters of the system say it increases voter turnout and proportional representation.

Maine's June 12 multi-party primary elections, in which voters will choose candidates for governor and congressional districts, will now make history as the first state election to use ranked-choice voting.

Fifty-two percent of Maine voters supported the system in a November 2016 ballot initiative, but lawmakers passed a bill last year delaying its implementation until December 2021 and argued that the state could not use a new voting system without direction from the legislature. The state Senate also threatened to repeal ranked-choice voting altogether if it could not pass a constitutional amendment by then.

More than 77,000 Maine residents signed a petition saying any repeal of the system by the legislature should be voided.

"The Maine legislature has changed or repealed all four of the initiatives passed by Maine voters in 2016", said Kyle Bailey of the Committee for Ranked Choice Voting in a statement on Tuesday. "Today's decision by the Maine Supreme Court confirms that the Maine people are sovereign and have the final say."

The Portland Press Herald, Maine's largest circulation daily newspaper, has extensive background details in their April 17th story: Ranked-choice voting will be used for June primaries, Maine supreme court rules.


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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by Grishnakh on Thursday April 19 2018, @05:37PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Thursday April 19 2018, @05:37PM (#669176)

    In this system, there's no need for there to be pressure on Bern to drop out, and no voters get discouraged. Everyone goes to the polls. Bern supporters vote Bern-Hill-Don. Hill supporters likely vote Hill-Bern-Don. Don voters lead with Don, and split their second and third preferences. Bern, as the low polling candidate, is eliminated, and his votes are redistributed to his voters second preference (which is largely Hill), leading to Hill being elected.

    Or, it turns out the pollsters were wrong, and Bern was more popular than they thought, and Bern edges out Hill, but not enough to win over Don under our current system. But under the ranked-choice system, Hill is dropped, and her votes go to their 2nd choices, which are almost all for Bern, and Bern wins. Here, it turns out the voters choosing the "unelectable" candidate were right after all, despite what the media and pollsters were trying to convince them of, and the candidate most preferred by the electorate wins.

    This might not happen, but it might; in 2016 we found out in a big way just how wrong the pollsters can be. They insisted up and down that there was absolutely no chance that we'd get the outcome we got, and here we are.

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