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Guest post by Jefferson Davis
Madison – Wisconsin is joining a growing list of states, cities, counties and other populated areas across America to permanently ban Ranked Choice Voting.
In Wisconsin, the legislative process requires a constitutional amendment to be heard at the Committee level for public comment and is then voted on in Committee before it is forwarded to the entire Assembly and Senate for consideration during a Floor Session. A constitutional amendment also has to be approved in two consecutive Sessions and can not be vetoed by the Governor’s Office. It is anticipated that the Assembly and Senate will have Hearings on AJR101 and SJR94 sometime within the next 2-3 weeks so they can hopefully be passed during the February 2024 Floor Session to be placed on a statewide ballot in 2025 after the resolutions are passed a second time.
The arguments for Ranked Choice Voting usually fall along the lines of the following:
- Encourages more candidates.
- Encourages more elector participation.
- Gets rid of the nastiness.
- Gives electors more choices.
- Will save our “democracy”.
- Takes big money out of elections.
- Is gaining in popularity.
- Have runoffs until one candidate gets to 50.1%.
Some have labeled Ranked Choice Voting as, “Keep Having Runoffs Until the Democrat Wins”.
- South Dakota – 2023
- Florida – 2022
- Montana – 2023
- Tennessee – 2022
- Idaho – 2023
- Massachusetts – 2020
- Many cities in Utah have opted out of RCV since its pilot program was initiated in 2019.
- Various Virginia government entities that hold elections have put a hold on RCV – 2023.
- Aspen, Colorado repealed RCV – 2010.
- On the statewide ballot in Nevada – 2024 – democrat leaders opposed.
- Liberal Democrat California Governor vetoed the bill – 2019.
- Even Liberal Democrat Walter Mondale opposed the idea in Minnesota in 2015.
- Liberal DC democrats filed lawsuit to stop it – 2023.
- Maine and Alaska are disasters – https://thefga.org/ranked-
choice-voting-is-a-disaster/. - Extremely confusing.
- Many runoffs possibly until one candidate gets to 50.1%.
- Very expensive.
- Much more work for Clerks and Poll Workers.
- Very delayed results.
- Endless number of ballots destroyed or trashed during each runoff.
- Ranked Choice/Top 5 Voting is not gaining in popularity. It’s being outright banned in a growing number of states, counties and communities across America.
Other states are encouraged to follow Wisconsin’s lead to give electors a voice in determining the ultimate fate of Ranked Choice Voting.
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