This is second in a
three-part series opposing ranked-choice voting, Question 5 on the state ballot
in November.
What’s wrong with ranked-choice voting? Shouldn’t voters be able to express their
second and lower choices in a single election?
These questions get right at the heart of the election
process. Elections take place after
political campaigns in which candidates make the case for themselves and try to
highlight their opponents’ weaknesses.
Each election is a distinct political event, and no two are
exactly alike. Candidates carry out
highly individual campaigns and voters’ sentiments change over time, especially
during the campaigns themselves when they have the chance to compare the
candidates.
The media plays a special role, providing current
information on the candidates, their evolving political positions and their
supporters and alliances.
The voters then choose from among the candidates. They are expected to vote for the person they
want to hold office or for the one they dislike the least.
Ranked-choice voting departs completely from this electoral
process to force a choice that may not represent the popular will after a full
campaign. If nobody receives a majority
of the votes, it could well produce a winner who, in the absence of a
head-to-head campaign, turns out to be the first choice of few voters.
That makes ranked-choice voting nothing more than a
dangerous shortcut to democracy.
In the U.S., democracy has always meant election either of a
candidate by an outright majority or the election of the person with the most
votes, even if not a majority. It has
never meant on the federal level or in any statewide election, the selection of
a candidate based on his or her second-choice votes.
So ranked-choice voting would be an American political
revolution, caused almost entirely by regret about the election of Gov. Paul
LePage, who won twice by a plurality.
How ironic it would be that one of the most disliked
governors in state history would be allowed to change its political system.
What is most concerning about the proposal is its lack of
confidence in the voters themselves. The
LePage elections could have taught Mainers a political lesson. If you think they are passive and ignorant,
what is essentially an electoral gimmick must be imposed on them.
The ranked-choice voting proponents attempted to show how it
would work by running mock elections among various kinds of Maine beer. What may be acceptable for picking your
favorite brew is unlikely to be as acceptable in electing the state’s chief
executive.
As with the choice of beer, ranked-choice voting trivializes
elections, the most important expression of our political system and the one
open to all citizens at regular intervals.
And it is complicated.
Voters may select as many ranked choices as there are candidates. After their first choice is counted, they
have no idea of how the voting proceeds.
A computer keeps reshuffling the votes, eliminating the weakest
candidate after each pass. It then spits
out the result, which may well be a surprise to the voters.
That means voters cannot even guess the consequences of
their actions. If you voted for one of
LePage’s opponents, you could judge if your candidate could win. With ranked-choice voting, you are ignorant
of the vote counting process and of your chances of backing a winner.
It is mathematically possible for a candidate receiving the
second or third highest number of first-place votes to win a ranked-choice
election. Is that what voters really
want?
Another major problem with the proposal is its
constitutionality. The Maine
Constitution specifically allows plurality elections. Simply passing a law, even one voted in
referendum, couldn’t change that fact.
Both houses of the Legislature would have to vote by
two-thirds to propose it and then a majority of state voters would have to
approve an amendment, before ranked-choice voting could take place. In short, even a positive vote this November
would not assure adoption.
Ranked-choice voting has not been adopted by any other state
because it would depart so far from the American political tradition.
If voters in other states conclude that a simple election in
which a candidate may be elected by gaining more votes than all others is not
satisfactory, other solutions are possible.
In all cases, the essence of the political system has been preserved without
ranked-choice voting.
Elections should give voters a real, clear and
understandable choice. Unhappiness with
the outcome of a couple of elections should not be allowed to undermine that
basic truth.
Next: Alternatives to
ranked-choice voting.