The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday is ranked choice voting, which will be on November’s ballot in several states. Fred Lucas wrote about ranked choice voting in his article published at The Daily Signal.
According
to Lucas, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and the District of
Columbia will vote on some type of ranked choice or “jungle primary” that
includes ranking the final candidates. Alaskans have enough buyer’s remorse
after adopting ranked choice four years ago to have it on the ballot again. Ten
states have already banned ranked choice voting.
In most states, supporters and opponents
of ranked choice voting don’t break down along traditional party lines. In several
states, in fact, both the Democratic and Republican parties oppose the process….
Ranked choice voting has been implemented
in marginally different ways in various jurisdictions. Generally, though,
voters are asked to rank their first, second, and third choices on the ballot.
If no candidate gets more than 50% to
finish in first place, a second round of counting occurs. Gradually, candidates
who come in last place after each round are eliminated.
The voter’s second choice will be counted
if his or her ballot lists an eliminated candidate as the first choice. More
rounds of voting continue until one candidate has a majority.
I
am among the Alaskans who do not like ranked choice voting. However, I do not
have buyer’s remorse because I voted against it four years ago. It did not
sound like a good system to me then, and now I know that it is not a good
system. Any system that gives Alaska a liberal representative when two-thirds
of the population is conservative is bad for Alaska!
Mary
Peltola is a Democrat representing a Republican state, and liberal Republican Lisa
Murkowski is our senator – all because of ranked choice voting. Murkowski would
have lost in a Republican primary race four years ago if it had not been for
ranked choice voting, and Peltola would have never been elected in a majority
Republican state.
Only
Republicans should be able to choose who will representative their party, and
only Democrats should decide who will be their representative. Ranked choice
voting is not a fair way to choose who will win elections. People who wish to
remain independent or to belong to other parties should have no say in a Republican
primary election or a Democrat primary election. This Alaskan will be voting to
get rid of ranked choice voting!
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