Majority rule and genuine voter choice are marks of a functioning democracy. To support voter choice in high turnout elections, we act to encourage understanding, adoption and effective implementation of instant runoff voting, a ranked choice voting system used in a growing number of American elections.


IRV in San Francisco Provides Lessons for New York City, Other Major Cities
New York and San FranciscoSan Francisco State University professor Richard DeLeon has released a new analysis of exit polls conducted during last November's initial instant runoff voting election for San Francisco municipal races. One conclusion: "San Francisco voters of virtually every type and stripe – liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans, whites and non-whites, men and women, young and old, rich and poor, and so on – prefer [IRV]  to the old December runoff system." Released on the San Francisco political site, The Usual Suspects, DeLeon's findings come as San Francisco prepares for its first citywide IRV elections this November -- and as other cities like New York City, Cincinnati and Los Angeles struggle with more antiquated, costly systems.

New York City, for example, employs a two-round runoff system to try and nominate citywide candidates with greater voter support than in a simple plurality primary. Indeed, several winners in non-citywide offices won with less than 30% of the vote. This year, however, depending on the outcome of the recent fractured mayoral primary, the city will potentially face a compulsory runoff in mayoral primary at an estimated cost of more than $10 million. Even worse, the first place candidate is poised to be only a few votes shy of avoiding the runoff, and the second place candidate has already conceded -- making the $10 million runoff an expensive formality. New York could learn from the San Francisco model, and implement IRV to produce party nominees with the support of more voters in one round instead of two, thereby saving millions of dollars, avoiding drops in turnout, and promoting more civil campaigning.

[ Download Rich DeLeon's Study at The Usual Suspects - .pdf 404 KB ]
[ More Information About IRV in San Francisco ]
[ New York City Plurality Elections 2005 ]
[ Mother Jones Calls for IRV ]
[ Gotham Gazette Calls for IRV ]



Wisconsin Legislators to Introduce IRV Option Bill
Legislation would give municipalities more choices
Wisconsin CheeseheadsWisconsin State Representative Mark Pocan (D-Madison) and State Senator Mark Miller (D-Monona) have announced plans to introduce a bill to improve the electoral process while saving money by allowing Wisconsin municipalities the option to use instant runoff voting when conducting local elections.
 
“Instant runoff voting will open access to our electoral process to more candidates and infuse more diverse viewpoints into our public debates on issues that have a direct impact on our citizens,” said Rep. Pocan. “It’s an innovative way to increase participation in our political process for many who currently feel left out. Communities that choose to go that route will be laboratories for democracy for our state."

[Read the legislators' press release]


Olympic Committee Uses Form of IRV to Choose 2012 Host City

Woman rejoices as London is announced as the host city for the XXX Olympiad.The International Olympic Committee chose London as the host city for the 2012 Games of the XXX Olympiad after four rounds of voting using a method similar to IRV. London won a majority in the highly contested, high publicity contest with 54 votes. The four-round runoff system was key to the London win, as it did not receive a majority of votes on the first counting. In later rounds, the city picked up a number of second and third choices from the eliminated cities of New York, Moscow, and Madrid.

The International Olympic Committee might consider joining the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the American Political Science Association, and other organizations in using IRV to make democratic decisions. With IRV, voters rank all of their preferences on a single ballot, and auxiliary choices are used to simulate runoffs.

[Read more about the Olympic vote]
[How IRV Works]



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Recent Articles
October 30th 2009
Don Fraser and George Latimer: The case for instant-runoff voting is clear
Star Tribune

Two former politicians tell St. Paul voters that IRV is "vitally important to us as citizens and as members of our communities."

October 29th 2009
Plurality voting rule is the real election spoiler
Baltimore Sun

In the midst of 3-way races in NJ and NY, FairVote board member and 1980 presidential candidate John Anderson makes the case for IRV over our flawed plurality system.

October 25th 2009
CHARTER AMENDMENT 3: County voters would lose power
The News Tribune

Amendment 3 to the Pierce county charter is an attempt by incumbent politicians to rig the system and prevent any serious challengers from competing. IRV is simply too fair and too democratic to not keep using in our electoral system.

October 22nd 2009
St. Paul should join IRV bandwagon
Star Tribune

Star Tribune stands behind IRV voting. They believe that if this system is used in St. Paul, it will show the state of Missouri that IRV can work and can better represent the voters in the state.