November 9, 2022 •
Nevada Voters Change How They Vote
Voters in Nevada have passed ballot question 3, which establishes open top-five primaries and ranked-choice voting for all congressional, gubernatorial, state official, and state legislative elections. An open primary is a nonpartisan primary, from which the top five candidates, regardless […]
Voters in Nevada have passed ballot question 3, which establishes open top-five primaries and ranked-choice voting for all congressional, gubernatorial, state official, and state legislative elections.
An open primary is a nonpartisan primary, from which the top five candidates, regardless of party, are sent to the general election.
Ranked choice voting allows people to vote for multiple candidates for each office, ranked in order of their preference.
Once the votes are tallied, if no candidate wins the majority vote, the lower performing candidates are eliminated until a clear winner is produced.
November 4, 2020 •
Massachusetts Voters Defeat Ranked Choice Proposal
On Election Day, voters defeated Question 2, an Act to Implement Ranked-Choice Voting in Elections. The initiative was proposed to create a ranked-choice voting system in which voters rank one or more candidates by order of preference. Ranked-choice voting would […]
On Election Day, voters defeated Question 2, an Act to Implement Ranked-Choice Voting in Elections.
The initiative was proposed to create a ranked-choice voting system in which voters rank one or more candidates by order of preference.
Ranked-choice voting would have been used in primary and general elections for all Massachusetts statewide offices, state legislative offices, federal congressional offices, and certain other offices.
However, ranked choice voting would exclude elections for president, county commissioner, or regional district school committee members.
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