Instant Runoff in Berkeley

On March 2, 2004, voters in Berkeley (CA) voted 72%-28% to authorize instant runoff voting (IRV) for city elections, with more than 20,000 people voting yes. The high-profile campaign had vigorous opposition, and the strong affirmative vote sends a mandate for implementing IRV as soon as possible. A companion ballot measure to preserve runoffs, but lower the winning threshold from 45% to 40%, won only 55% of the vote.

To learn more about the campaign for IRV in Berkeley, check out:

Pro-IRV commentary from the League of Women Voters 

Local news coverage

Final election results



 
In the News
November 24th 2006
Oakland's IRV Author Believes System Will Work
Berkeley Daily Planet

While the clerks of Alameda County's (CA) three major cities want to implement the same form of instant runoff voting, the author of Measure O, which Oakland passed in November 2006, says minor differences are unlikely to drastically affect election

December 2nd 2004
IRV Advances
Green Pages

Howard Ditkoff claims that instant runoff voting (IRV) would be beneficial for the Greens, and discusses all the advantages of it.

December 1st 2004
Instant Runoff Voting Makes Advances November 2
Independent Progressive Politics Network

More cities - San Francisco, Burlington, Vermont - start to apply instant runoff voting (IRV)to elect their mayor.

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