Santa Monica Ranked Voting has released a study of recent City
Council elections, which shows that, in the 2000 election, over 40%
of the people who showed up at the polls did not cast all of the
votes that were allotted to them.
Under Santa Monica’s current election system, a strong preference for one candidate may cause a voter to cast fewer than his allotted votes, since a vote for any of the other candidates might help defeat his favorite.
A study of vote counts in Santa Monica’s three most recent elections reveals that Santa Monica voters consistently undervote. In 2000, the average voter cast less than three of his four allotted votes. In all three elections, over 35% of voters undervoted.
“Although many voters recognize that the current system leads to strategic voting, we think that Santa Monicans will be surprised when they learn how widespread this problem really is,” said Julie Walters, a co-founder of Santa Monica Ranked Voting. “When over a third of Santa Monicans are not fully utilizing their votes, there is a serious flaw in the system.”
Santa Monica Ranked Voting was formed to build support for Instant Runoff Voting (IRV) and Choice Voting, two voting systems that address this and other problems in the current system.
Both IRV and Choice Voting allow voters to rank their choices for each seats. Choice Voting is designed for multi-seat elections, such as those Santa Monica holds every two years, while IRV is designed for filling a single seat, such as the 1999 special election that was held to fill a newly vacant seat on the Council. When a voter ranks his first, second and third choices, if his first choice is not elected, his vote goes to his second choice and so on, until someone is elected.
Santa Monica has flirted with Choice Voting and IRV, but never adopted either system. A 1992 city Charter Review Commission recommended Choice Voting for Santa Monica’s regular elections. The Santa Monica League of Women Voters has expressed support for the “consideration of alternative voting systems in Santa Monica elections with a special emphasis on … Choice Voting.” Councilmember Mike Feinstein and Mayor Pro Tem Kevin McKeown have both supported IRV and Choice Voting.
Under Santa Monica’s current election system, a strong preference for one candidate may cause a voter to cast fewer than his allotted votes, since a vote for any of the other candidates might help defeat his favorite.
A study of vote counts in Santa Monica’s three most recent elections reveals that Santa Monica voters consistently undervote. In 2000, the average voter cast less than three of his four allotted votes. In all three elections, over 35% of voters undervoted.
“Although many voters recognize that the current system leads to strategic voting, we think that Santa Monicans will be surprised when they learn how widespread this problem really is,” said Julie Walters, a co-founder of Santa Monica Ranked Voting. “When over a third of Santa Monicans are not fully utilizing their votes, there is a serious flaw in the system.”
Santa Monica Ranked Voting was formed to build support for Instant Runoff Voting (IRV) and Choice Voting, two voting systems that address this and other problems in the current system.
Both IRV and Choice Voting allow voters to rank their choices for each seats. Choice Voting is designed for multi-seat elections, such as those Santa Monica holds every two years, while IRV is designed for filling a single seat, such as the 1999 special election that was held to fill a newly vacant seat on the Council. When a voter ranks his first, second and third choices, if his first choice is not elected, his vote goes to his second choice and so on, until someone is elected.
Santa Monica has flirted with Choice Voting and IRV, but never adopted either system. A 1992 city Charter Review Commission recommended Choice Voting for Santa Monica’s regular elections. The Santa Monica League of Women Voters has expressed support for the “consideration of alternative voting systems in Santa Monica elections with a special emphasis on … Choice Voting.” Councilmember Mike Feinstein and Mayor Pro Tem Kevin McKeown have both supported IRV and Choice Voting.
Election Day '09 was a roller-coaster for election reformers. Instant runoff voting had a great night in Minnesota, where St. Paul voters chose to implement IRV for its city elections, and Minneapolis voters used IRV for the first time—with local media touting it as a big success. As the Star-Tribune noted in endorsing IRV for St. Paul, Tuesday’s elections give the Twin Cities a chance to show the whole state of Minnesota the benefits of adopting IRV. There were disappointments in Lowell and Pierce County too, but high-profile multi-candidate races in New Jersey and New York keep policymakers focused on ways to reform elections; the Baltimore Sun and Miami Herald were among many newspapers publishing commentary from FairVote board member and former presidential candidate John Anderson on how IRV can mitigate the problems of plurality elections.