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Between the Lines: To Make Your Vote Count More

Instant runoff voting may be on the ballot in Massachusetts next year.

Comments (4)
Thursday, October 01, 2009

There's a flaw in our election system that's frustrated thoughtful voters for a long time. It's the winner-take-all structure of our balloting: the fact that you find yourself having to worry about the "horse race" level of the election to feel that you're making your vote count, and the danger that a spoiler can steal votes from a more qualified candidate.

There is a different way to run a voting system; it's called "instant runoff," "ranked choice" or "preferential" voting. It's used in several other countries, in some American cities, and by educational and other institutions—most famously by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Instant runoff allows you to vote, not just for one person, but for a list that shows your second and third choices (or more) as well as your first. Under this system, if one candidate doesn't receive more than 50 percent of the vote, the one with the fewest votes is removed from the ballot and a new tally (or more than one, if necessary) yields a majority winner.

Here's why that would yield a result that's truer to voters' wishes than current results: suppose it's 2000 and you want to vote for Ralph Nader. You believe he's the most enlightened candidate. But you know he won't win, and if you vote for him, you'll take a vote away from the best realpolitik candidate, Al Gore.

Under the instant runoff system, you could vote for Nader but name Gore as your second choice. Then, when Nader was eliminated, your vote wouldn't go into a black hole but would resurface as a vote for Gore (and Nader, the third party candidate, wouldn't be pilloried for exercising his right to run).

It would be the same if you wanted to vote in a Republican primary with a list of candidates including big names like Mitt Romney and lesser known but promising party regulars like Tim Pawlenty. Even if Pawlenty didn't get the numbers to stay in the race, your second vote would go to help the best person with a genuine chance of winning, but in the meantime you'd have helped Pawlenty build a constituency.

Instant runoff means that your vote for your values counts more and the influence of media predictions counts less. It means that spoiler exploitation—tactics like Republicans supporting Nader in order to draw votes away from Gore—are less effective.

Instant runoff voting (IRV for short) has been endorsed in the past by both Barack Obama and John McCain. It's garnered much support from the League of Women Voters and the Green Party. Proponents say it improves turnout by giving voters more choice; it certainly puts them under less pressure to choose the candidate they see as the lesser of two evils.

In Massachusetts, a movement to get a question about instant runoff on the state ballot in 2010 is going strong. Between now and November 18, Citizens for Voter Choice and allied groups are holding a petition drive to get the necessary 100,000 signatures. The goal is to have instant runoff used in state elections and, in the longer term, to let state elections demonstrate its feasibility for national contests. For more information or to volunteer to collect signatures, check www.voterchoicema.org.

Comments (4)
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I recommend "range voting" or "approval voting" instead of instant runoff.
Posted by Warren D Smith on 9.30.09 at 13:42
IRV would be a terrific voting reform. Warren's "range voting" isn't used for any public election in the world. IRV is a proven, successful reform used by many countries and organizations around the world.
Posted by Greg on 9.30.09 at 18:05
IRV has been used for decades, and has caused about as many problems as it has solved. Score voting (aka range voting) is better in essentially every way, and by a large margin. Simpler, more representative, less prone to fraud, you name it. Greg's criticism about its lack of use is ironically, considering he could have said the same thing when the pioneers of IRV decided to give it a try. If we never try new things, we'll be stuck with the status quo. And considering that the evidence for score voting is massively greater than any evidence in favor of IRV (we have computer simulations of elections now, that did not exist in the early 1900's when IRV first saw use), Greg's argument really makes no sense at all. I encourage people to check out the book "Gaming the Vote", by William Poundstone for a more in-depth look. IRV's proponents rely mostly on widespread misinformation, whereas score voting's proponents use advanced math and scientific standards of objectivity.
Posted by Clay Shentrup on 10.1.09 at 21:15
The point of voting reform is to change our politics. There are a vast number of reforms that could be enacted to do this, and pros and cons with each one. At this point IRV is an approved measure getting signatures around the state, with a strong organization and an army of volunteers and advocates making their case to regular folks. If range voting advocates want to continue this debate I suggest they sign the petition and make the case why another reform would be better to the public. Chances like this only come so often, and I believe that anyone interested in voting reform benefits from this being on the ballot and providing an opportunity for further debate. If you disagree with the above I suggest you organize with other advocates of range voting to get such a reform on the ballot. Otherwise your arguments are without practical weight and your criticism of IRV provides no momentum toward any kind of voting reform.
Posted by Patrick B on 10.2.09 at 13:50
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