Cumulative Voting -- A Commonly Used Proportional Representation Method
In cumulative voting, voters cast as many votes as there are seats. But unlike winner-take-all systems, voters are not limited to giving only one vote to a candidate. Instead, they can put multiple votes on one or more candidates. For instance, in an election for a five-seat body, voters could choose to give one vote each to five candidates, two votes to one candidate and three to another, or all five votes to a single candidate. If a members of minority group work together and get behind a single candidate, "plumping" all of their votes on him or her, they can hope to get someone elected, even if they only make up a small share of the population. Voting rights scholar Lani Guinier has promoted cumulative voting as a colorblind means to provide fair minority representation.

Cumulative voting was used to elect the Illinois state legislature from 1870 to 1980. In recent years it has been used to resolve voting rights cases for city council elections in Amarillo (TX) and Peoria (IL), for county commission elections in Chilton County (AL) and for school board elections in Sisseton (SD) and more than fifty other jurisdictions; in most cases a member from the protected minority was elected following the implementation of cumulative voting. Cumulative voting in 1994 was imposed by a federal judge in a Maryland voting rights case.

Many corporations use cumulative voting to elect their Boards of Directors, in order to represent the interests of minority shareholders. About 10% of the S&P 500 use cumulative voting, including Aon, Toys 'R' Us, Walgreen's and Hewlett-Packard. Several condominium associations use cumulative voting so that all unit owners are represented on the board.

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July 25th 2003
Analysis: Sandberg enjoys broad support Citywide swath of voters ranks councilman No. 1 in April at-large field
Journal Star

July 25th 2003
Cumulative voting bill signed by Blagojevich
The News-Gazette

A new Illinois law allows county boards with multimember districts to use cumulative voting.

May 9th 2003
Key Win for Full Representation
The Midwest Democracy Center Report

HB 138 passed the Illinois Senate, leaving it up to the governor to decide whether counties may grant cumulative voting rights in multi-member districts.

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