March 9, 2004
Independence Party members didn't vote for just one
presidential candidate at their precinct caucuses, they
ranked them. And they ranked Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., No.
1.
The party conducted an experiment with instant-runoff
voting, in which a voter ranks each candidate with a number.
If nobody receives an absolute majority in the first round,
the last-place candidate's ballots are redistributed based
on his or her supporters' second choice. Vote-counters
repeat the process until one candidate has at least 50
percent.
Supporters like instant-runoff voting because it
eliminates the spoiler effect of third-party candidates.
"Nobody's vote is wasted, and somebody wins with a
majority," said Independence Party member Dave
Hutcheson. "We like those two things."
About 500 people attended the Independence Party caucuses
last Tuesday and cast instant-runoff ballots for president.
Since the party wasn't running a candidate, the ballots
included Edwards and other Democratic contenders, plus
President Bush and Ralph Nader.
In the first round of balloting, the vote was 22 percent
for Edwards, 21 percent for John Kerry, 17 percent for Bush
and 15 percent for Nader. It took 11 rounds to pick a
winner: Edwards won with 53 percent.
The vote wasn't binding since the Independence Party is a
state party only and doesn't send delegates to other
parties' conventions. And Edwards quit the race last
Wednesday.
But it demonstrated how the process works. The Minnesota
Senate has already passed a bill allowing Roseville to use
instant-runoff voting in a city council election next month,
and the House is considering it.
Rob Rossi, who is with the instant-runoff advocacy group
FairVote Minnesota, said local elections are the best place
for people to see how the voting works and may dispel fears
about its complexity.
"We think the best possible outcome is for people to
try it," he said.