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Watch Out For 'Rank Choice Voting'

You will not believe what “reformers” have devised to tinker with and manipulate our elections. It is called ranked choice voting (or “instant runoff voting”)—but it is really a scheme to disconnect elections from issues and allow candidates with marginal support from voters to win elections. Some jurisdictions in the U.S. have already replaced traditional elections with the ranked choice scheme.

Here is how it works. In 2008, instead of choosing to cast your ballot for John McCain, Barack Obama, Ralph Nader, Bob Barr, or Cynthia McKinney, all of whom were running for president, you would vote for all of them and rank your choice. In other words, you would list all five candidates on your ballot from one to five, with one being your first choice for president and five being your last choice.

If none of the candidates were chosen as the number one pick by a majority of voters in Round One, then the presidential candidate with the lowest number of votes would be eliminated from the ballot. People who selected that candidate as their top pick—let us say it was McKinney—would automatically have their votes changed to their second choice. Then the scores would be recalculated, over and over again, until one of the candidates finally won a majority as the second, third, or even fourth choice of voters.

In the end, a voter’s ballot might wind up being cast for the candidate he ranked far below his first choice—a candidate to whom he may have strong political objections and for whom he would not vote in a traditional voting system.

[i]Don't let them do it in your state![/i]
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For once, I'm a 100% with you, that people should be cautious about ranked choice voting.

I'm not sure if it's a better idea or not, but I'm damned sure people need to understand it, and actually think about it, and the precise details of how its implemented before they get stuck with it.
Budwick · 70-79, M
@MistyCee [quote]For once, I'm a 100% with you, ...

I'm not sure if it's a better idea or not,[/quote]

Misty - even when you're all in - you're not.

You've become a caricature!
@Budwick I can't get that link to open up. I hope I'm cute in it though.
Budwick · 70-79, M
@MistyCee I fixed it
@Budwick Thanks. It's cute, and you nailed me.

Bottom line is, I'm less worried about how our vote counts as opposed to whether we understand how it does or doesn't. At least that way, we know how we're getting hoodwinked and can go from there.
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@MistyCee

I still have hope for you, Misty.

Sometimes. 🤫
@Thinkerbell lol. I appreciate the hope.

I've never bought the idea that the ,"right" or Conservatives really wanted us to revert to pre-mammalian or reptilian thinking, and I'm still hoping there's a way to compromise.
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@MistyCee

I'm much more concerned about the left wanting to create a one-party state.

I wouldn't want a right-leaning one-party state either.

With two parties of equal strength, the two sets of crooks tend to keep each other from going too far.
@Thinkerbell I really haven't seen any evidence that the Dems want a one party state, though.

They just don't want this Republican party, the one that labels non Trumpists RINOs to be in control.
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@MistyCee

You only have to look at the large cities where they have already done just that.

Hopelessly corrupt, dirty and crime-ridden.

Except of course in the well-guarded neighborhoods in which the left elites live. 🙄
@Thinkerbell Sighs. I get it. When I registered to vote in the deep south, I registered as a Democrat because it was the only way to vote in primaries.

That ceased to be the case, although now, registering Republican almost guarantees that you'll be limited to voting for sociopaths, aka, Trumpists.
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@MistyCee

You may have to move north, say, to Chicago.

Then you can be limited to voting for left-wing sociopaths.
@Thinkerbell That's kind of why I stayed, but moved to the Republican suburbs which didn't help much.
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@MistyCee

I live in a (mostly) Republican suburb.
But there are enough of both political persuasions that there are weekly demonstrations on Saturday mornings by left and right wing groups, standing across the main highway from each other with signs, slogans, etc. It's been going on for years, but peacefully. No fights or other violence that I'm aware of.

No white sheets, no hammers and sickles. 🙂