What is Ranked Choice Voting?
Ranked choice voting is a nonpartisan electoral reform that gives voters the freedom to rank candidates in order of choice.
Rank candidates how you see fit
Instead of choosing ONE candidate, ranked choice voting allows voters to rank all candidates according to their preference (1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.).
In each round of ranked choice voting, the candidate with the lowest number of votes is eliminated. When a voter's number one choice is eliminated, their second choice is included in the count for the second round. This process continues until the final round.
How does Ranked Choice Voting work?
Counting the Ballots
RCV ballots are counted in a series of rounds.
Just like we are used to, all the first choices are counted. If a candidate has a majority of votes, (more than 50%) that candidate wins.
If no candidate has more than 50% of the vote, the last place candidate (the candidate with the fewest votes) is eliminated and any votes cast for that candidate are transferred to the voter’s next preference - if the voter chose to rank more candidates. After each round of counting, we check again to see if any candidate has won a majority. If not, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated again and there is another round of counting.
Candidates continue to be eliminated after each count until one candidate has won the majority.
In the example ballot above, no candidate received a majority of votes. This voter's first choice would be eliminated and their vote added to Candidate A's tally.
Multi-Winner Races
Ranked Choice Voting can also be used to elect multiple candidates at a time, such as elections for many City Council seats. For more details, check out this multi-winner RCV example provided by our friends at FairVote.
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