INSTANT RUNOFFS WILL END 'LOSER-TAKES-ALL':
Allowing voters to rank their choices would add value to all votes

By John Gear
Published November 17th 2000 in Lansing State Journal
When I screw up, it's usually worse because it's something I anticipated but failed to fix. Just like when I nearly killed myself driving. Upon waking I remembered being told not to drive all night because I would fall asleep at the wheel. Now we are all stuck in a shared national crash we saw coming. We will either elect a president who lacks even plurality support (much less a majority) or we will not -- but only by the grace of God. Derek Melot's Nov. 9 column blasting Green Party candidate Ralph Nader for this ignores that all who have studied the Electoral College predicted this. Blaming Nader is like blaming a bathroom scale for obesity. The Electoral College, as anachronistic as bleeding patients to cure them of "bad humors," always contains chances for "loser take all" elections. And, while this wasn't Michigan's year to be ignored, the College also causes candidates to ignore states that appear to be decided early. All campaign energy -- and even the candidates' ideas for how to govern -- are pitched only to a small slice of America: swing voters in swing states. This means that people who are least engaged in politics and the least well-informed have the most power. Even an imaginary state populated only by ideal citizens who tirelessly study issues would no doubt reap a reward in heaven -- but here would be ignored and promised no pork just as soon as polls revealed how they leaned. What to do? Simple. Scrap the Electoral College and elect the president by vote of the people. But what if the top finisher only gets 37% support, like Jesse Ventura in winning the governorship of Minnesota? That's bad. The president of the United States should not be someone whom more people opposed than supported. That means we need a runoff. Runoff!? That means pitting two candidates against each other in a short, intense war fueled by millions of dollars for soundbite attack ads. It would cost taxpayers $100 million just to administer the election. And campaign-weary voters would have to vote again which means many would not. Luckily, there is a proven way to find the majority's choice with only one ballot. How? Use a full-choice ballot that lets voters rank their choices instead of only choosing one. Then, if no candidate earns a majority, the least popular one is dropped and a runoff is held instantly. In this runoff, each ballot goes to the highest-ranked candidate marked on it, skipping over dropped candidates. This repeats until one candidate has a majority. This "instant runoff voting" ends minority winners-without-mandates and would promote positive campaigns, as candidates would appeal to opponents' supporters for second and third choice rankings. Most important, instant runoff voting means no spoilers, period. Every voter will get to vote without fear of helping to elect someone they despise. By making all candidates care about all voters no matter where they live instant runoff voting not only prevents "loser take all," it means all voters win.