Voters rejected historic election reforms across the US, despite more than $100M push
UNB
Publish: 23 Nov 2024, 06:02 PM
JEFFERSON
CITY, Mo. Nov 23 (AP/UNB) - Two weeks before Election Day, activists from
across the country gathered for an online rally heralding the historic number
of state ballot initiatives seeking to change the way people vote. Hopes were
high that voters would ditch traditional partisan primaries and embrace ballots
with more candidate choices.
Instead, the election
reform movement lost almost everywhere it appeared on a statewide ballot.
"It turns out, in
retrospect, we weren't yet ready for prime time," said John Opdycke,
president of the advocacy group Open Primaries, which organized the rally.
In Arizona, Colorado,
Idaho, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Oregon and South Dakota - a mixture of red,
blue and purple states - voters rejected either ranked choice voting, open
primaries or a combination of both.
The open primary
proposals sought to place candidates of all parties on the same ballot, with a
certain number of top finishers advancing to the general election. Under ranked
choice voting, people can vote for multiple candidates in order of preference.
If no one receives a majority of first place votes, then candidates who receive
the fewest votes are eliminated and their votes redistributed to people's next
choices.
Election reform
advocates raised about $110 million for the statewide ballot measures, vastly
outpacing their opponents, according to an Associated Press analysis of
campaign finance figures that could grow even larger as post-election reports
are filed. Still, their promotional push wasn't enough to persuade most voters.
"While Americans
are frustrated with politics, I think most Americans are just fine with the
traditional way of voting," said Trent England, executive director of Save
Our States, which opposes ranked choice voting.
Advocates for
alternative election methods had thought momentum was on their side after
Alaska voters narrowly approved a combination of open primaries and ranked
choice voting in 2020. Then voters in Nevada - where initiatives proposing
constitutional amendments require approval in two consecutive elections - gave
first-round approval to a similar measure in 2022. But Nevada voters reversed
course this year.
In Alaska, an attempt
this year to repeal open primaries and ranked choice voting appears to have
fallen just short of passing, garnering 49.9% support in results released
Wednesday. Final results are expected to be certified Nov. 30.
In addition to Alaska,
versions of ranked choice voting already exist in Maine 's federal elections
and about 50 counties or cities. Voters in Washington, D.C., and the Chicago
suburb of Oak Park, Illinois, both approved ranked choice voting this November.
And voters in the Minneapolis suburb of Bloomington, Minnesota, reaffirmed
their use of it.
Data suggests that
ranked choice voting rarely results in different outcomes than traditional
elections won by candidates receiving a plurality, but not majority, of
support. The AP analyzed nearly 150 races this fall in 16 jurisdictions where
ranked choice voting is authorized, ranging from the Board of Assessors
elections in the Village of Arden, Delaware, to the presidential elections in
Alaska and Maine. The ranking system was needed in just 30% of those cases,
because the rest were won by candidates receiving a majority of the initial
votes.
Nationwide, just three
candidates who initially trailed in first-place votes ended up winning after
ranked vote tabulations - one for Portland City Council and two for the San
Francisco Board of Supervisors.
In San Francisco, two
progressive candidates campaigned together, encouraging voters to rank them No.
1 and 2. Initially, they fell behind a moderate candidate who would have won a
traditional election. But after six rounds of rankings, one of the progressive
candidates emerged the victor when the other was eliminated and his supporters'
votes were redistributed to her.
Supporters of ranked
choice voting point to that as a success, because it avoided two similar
candidates splitting the vote and both losing.
"It's kind of like
a pressure valve - you don't always need it, but when you do, you really
do," said Deb Otis, director of research and policy at FairVote, which
advocates for ranked choice voting.
In Portland, Oregon,
voters used ranked choice voting for the first time this November in their
mayoral and City Council elections, even as Oregon voters simultaneously
rejected a measure to implement it for federal and statewide offices. Political
outsider Keith Wilson, who led Portland's 19-person mayoral field with about
one-third of the initial vote, ultimately won election after 19 rounds of
ranked tabulations. One City Council seat took at least 30 rounds to decide.
But not everyone
participated in the new voting method. About one-fifth of Portland voters
skipped the council races, and about one-in-seven voters left the mayoral
election blank.
Opponents of ranked
choice voting contend that some people find it confusing and don't vote in
ranked races.
Academic research also
has cast doubt on the benefits of ranked choice voting, said Larry Jacobs, a
professor of politics at the University of Minnesota. Fewer Black voters tend
to rank candidates than white voters, he said, and there is little evidence
that ranked choice voting reduces political polarization or negative
campaigning.
"I think the tide
for ranked choice voting is turning away from it," Jacobs said.
Groups that heavily
financed this year's election reform initiatives aren't giving up, but may
retool their approach. Supporters are considering whether to separate the
efforts to end partisan primaries from those to adopt ranked choice voting, and
whether to focus more on incremental changes that state legislatures can make
instead of on high-stakes initiatives to amend state constitutions.
Opdycke said some of
this year's initiatives may have launched prematurely, counting on ads to
persuade voters without first cultivating enough grassroots support.
"I think there's a
deeper appreciation for the kind of brick work, foundation-building,
conversation creation that has to go on as a precursor of launching a formal
campaign," he said.
Unite America, which
spent around $70 million this year in its effort to end partisan primaries, is
analyzing voter surveys and focus group results to help reshape its approach.
"The question is
not if we should continue that effort," Unite America Executive Director
Nick Troiano said, "but how are we ultimately going to succeed at
it?"
_____