Ranked-voting
is the flavor of the day. And it will turn out to have a bitter
taste.
Its
advocates want to replace real democracy, in which a majority picks
the winner, with something akin to a game show method of selection.
The result could be more like “Family Feud” than a decision on
one of the most important choices people can make.
The
problem, its advocates say, is that our political system is based on
a choice between two candidates, but we frequently have several more
in the race.
There
are three possible solutions. One is to let the candidate with the
most votes, even if not a majority, be the winner. It is done that
way in federal elections and the great majority of states.
Or
you could hold a runoff election between the top two vote getters in
the initial election. That’s done in 11 states.
Then,
there’s the ranked voting election in which people rank their
choices the first and only time they vote. If there is no majority
winner, votes in lower tiers are redistributed until there is a
winner.
Maine
has used the first method effectively. There were at least three
serious candidates in nine of the past 10 elections for governor.
And nobody complained until Republican Paul LePage was twice elected
without a majority. It’s easy to understand that ranked-voting
advocates believe he would have lost under their system.
Lewiston
has just used the runoff system in the election for mayor. In
effect, the first race served as a primary for the second, and the
turnout in each was about the same. Voters got the chance to
consider the real alternatives each time with an indisputable
majority decision at the end.
Ranked
voting is only used in a relative handful of municipalities. In
Portland, where it has been used once in 2011, ballots were counted
15 times. In Minneapolis, the 2012 mayor’s race caused 33
recounts.
Perhaps
the biggest problem was the result was not transparent. Voters could
not easily understand the process or know how votes were counted. In
a traditional election, it’s easy to know who got the most votes.
And
the ranked voting system can produce the election of a person who
received fewer first place votes than another candidate. That may
not seem fair to many voters, creating just the kind of discontent
our already stressed system doesn’t need.
The
ranked voting system can be gamed, literally. Just don’t select
anybody but your favorite candidate. That’s called “bullet
voting,” and it could help a candidate who is the second choice of
other voters.
None
of this amounts to majority rule, despite its advocates claims. A
majority, by its very definition, means more than half. Ranked
voting cannot assure that.
Does
it eliminate “spoilers?” A spoiler costs another candidate so
many votes that he or she loses an election. But how do you know a
spoiler before an election?
Does
ranked voting favor issues over candidates? There’s no indication
that was true in Portland or Minneapolis.
Ranked
voting encourages “respectful campaigns” according to its
advocates. Promises, promises.
Ranked
choice proponents dislike primaries, because fringe candidates can
win, producing an unhappy choice in the general election. That
sounds like the position of philosopher-kings who really don’t
trust democracy and certainly want to see the end of political
parties.
If
there’s something wrong with primaries, find a way to get more
people to vote. But don’t manipulate their voting.
Perhaps
better arguments would be that it is loss costly and easy. But why
should real democracy be easy or cheap? It’s worth doing right.
Maine
now uses a system that has produced acceptable results, both easily
and cheaply.
If
we want decisions guaranteed to be made by a majority, then a runoff
is a better idea, because it allows voters to make a clear choice
rather than the muddled, computer-run outcome of ranked-choice
voting.