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Tag: ranked-choice voting

  • Brianne Nadeau won’t seek 4th term on DC Council – WTOP News

    Brianne Nadeau announced Thursday that she will not be seeking a fourth term as a member of the D.C. Council.

    Brianne Nadeau announced Thursday that she will not be seeking a fourth term as a member of the D.C. Council.

    She had served as the Ward 1 council member since 2015. Before that, Nadeau served as an advisory neighborhood commissioner from 2007 to 2011.

    “I have always believed that these positions should not be lifetime appointments. That those in leadership should cultivate others to carry on the work,” Nadeau said in a statement. “It’s not easy to step away, especially at such a difficult time for our community and our country. But I do believe that it is the right time for me, for my family, and for Ward 1.”

    She is considered to be one of the most progressive council members. Last week, she was one of two “no” votes on the deal to build a new Commanders stadium on the old RFK Stadium site, maintaining her stance that the taxpayer money would be better invested in schools, libraries and housing.

    Open seats on the D.C. council are scarce. Nadaeu’s departure could set the stage for a crowded field of candidates hoping to succeed her in Ward 1, which hasn’t had an open seat in four decades. 

    The Ward 1 primary is scheduled for next June. The District is set to launch a system of ranked choice voting during that primary election.

    The council added funding for ranked choice voting to the 2026 budget through an amendment that Nadeau authored alongside At-Large Council member Christina Henderson.

    “Voters in Ward 1 will be able to rank the candidates based on their own preferences, ensuring the candidate with the strongest support across our community represents us,” Nadeau said.

    Nadeau will serve through the remainder of her term. Her last day in office will be Jan. 2, 2027, closing out 11 years on the council.

    “I have deep confidence that the people of Ward 1 will continue, as we always have, to fight for justice, support our neighbors, and stand up for our Ward 1 values,” Nadeau said.

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    Tadiwos Abedje

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  • Proposition 131 would change Colorado’s election system in races for governor, Congress, other offices

    Proposition 131 would change Colorado’s election system in races for governor, Congress, other offices

    Proposition 131 would fundamentally change how many of Colorado’s elections are run, presenting one of the most sweeping changes to the democratic process in the Centennial State’s 148-year history.

    As it stands, Colorado’s elections are generally handled in much the same way as in other states: In partisan contests, Republicans compete against Republicans and Democrats against Democrats in June primary races. A single winner from each party advances to the general election, where they’re matched up against any unaffiliated or third-party candidates who make the ballot. Voters select their preferred candidates, and the candidate with the most votes wins.

    This ballot measure would upend that system amid a broader national push to pursue open primaries and ranked-choice voting.

    The measure is backed by Denver millionaire Kent Thiry, the former CEO of dialysis giant DaVita, plus Unite America, a national group he co-chairs, and a small group of similarly wealthy donors.

    It’s an initiative that was petitioned onto the ballot, and since it would change state law, the measure needs a simple majority to pass in the Nov. 5 election.

    What would Proposition 131 do if passed?

    Prop. 131 would change elections for the state legislature, state offices — governor, attorney general, treasurer, secretary of state, the State Board of Education and the University of Colorado Board of Regents — as well as federal races for Colorado’s seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.

    The measure would do two main things for those elections. First, it would replace the state’s current primary system with a single open primary in each affected race. That means all candidates would compete against each other in a primary, regardless of party. For example, there could be five Democrats, three Republicans, a Green and a Libertarian running for governor, all on the same ballot — and all considered by voters of any or no political affiliation.

    The top four vote recipients in that primary — again, regardless of party — would then advance to the general election. (If only two or three people run in the primary, they all would advance.)

    That’s where the second change comes in: Prop. 131 would institute a ranked-choice voting system, under which voters in the general election would rank each candidate in a given race by preference.

    If no candidate earns a majority on the first tabulation, then the candidate with the fewest top-rankings is eliminated. Any ballot that had that candidate as the top choice then automatically shifts to that voter’s next-highest-ranking candidate, and the tabulation begins again. It continues in rounds until one candidate secures a majority of active votes.

    If there are three or four candidates in the general election, voters don’t have to rank all of them; they may rank only as much as they wish. There is, however, a risk that their ballot will become inactive if all of their ranked candidates have been eliminated, since their votes can’t be reallocated.

    When would election changes take effect?

    That’s a trickier question to answer than you’d think. The ballot measure says the reforms would take effect on Jan. 1, 2026. But a late legislative amendment this year — inserted quietly into a broader elections bill at the end of the regular session in May — now requires that 12 counties use ranked-choice voting before it can take effect for statewide or federal races.

    It’s unclear if and when that requirement would be met.

    Gov. Jared Polis, apparently unaware of that amendment when the bill was passed, still signed the broader bill in June after the change had garnered media coverage. But he told lawmakers that if voters approved Prop. 131, he would issue an executive order to convene lawmakers and stakeholders to map out an implementation process. His stated commitment is to make sure the changes are in effect by the 2028 election cycle.

    That still would be two years later than the ballot measure stipulates, and it would mean the new system wouldn’t be in place for major races in 2026, including the first open gubernatorial race since 2018.

    What do supporters say?

    Supporters of the measure pitch it as a broad balm to a variety of ills plaguing America’s elections. They argue that an open primary system would allow voters of all kinds to have a more direct say in choosing general election candidates, particularly in places — like Denver — where one party’s primary now generally decides who wins the general election in November.

    They also contend that ranked-choice voting, the second piece of the measure, would empower voters in all districts to have an influence on who wins, while bolstering the chances that the ultimate winner has secured a majority and is a consensus choice.

    Supporters also argue that the reforms would increase civility because candidates of different parties would be incentivized to appeal to voters of all stripes; improve turnout because races would be more frequently contested; and improve candidate diversity because the fear of “spoiler” candidates would be eliminated.

    Seth Klamann

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  • Women’s leadership and power take center stage in the 2024 Presidential Election

    Women’s leadership and power take center stage in the 2024 Presidential Election

    The usual phrase heard between now and Election Day will be, “this is the most important election of our lives.” With sixty-three days remaining, the 2024 Presidential Election could become a referendum on the power of women. Yes, at the ballot box and in elected office. 

    RepresentWomen is an organization that believes in a democracy with gender-balanced representation in appointed and elected government offices. It held an event at the Hubbard Inn during the 2024 Democratic National Convention. It was designed for attendees to meet currently elected women in different levels of government. Also, women who are running for elected positions were also in attendance. The meeting highlighted the importance of women in leadership. Plus, the event emphasized the need for women in state houses. 

    RepresentWomen says they have an outsized focus on state legislatures because statehouses are the epicenters of American democracy right now. For example, when Roe was overturned on June 2022 by the U.S. Supreme Court, the ruling ushered in a patchwork of abortion rules. As a result, every southern state, except Virginia, has a form of an abortion ban in effect. In states like Mississippi and Texas, their attorneys general have proposed a surveillance program to monitor the periods of and the whereabouts of pregnant women. 

    Maya Harris appears during an event by RepresentWomen on Tuesday, August 20, 2024 at the Hubbard Inn in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    The Inspirations

    Maya Harris is most well known as Vice President Kamala Harris’s younger sister. However, at 29, she was named Dean of the University of California Hastings College of the Law and Lincoln Law School of San Jose. Since then, Harris served as a senior policy advisor for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. She also serves on the Board of Directors of Emily’s List, Planned Parenthood Action Fund, and New York-Presbyterian Hospital. 

    “She needs everyone in this room fighting right alongside her,” said Maya Harris. “So, in addition to all of the important work to be supported through these two organizations, because you are absolutely right. We are on a mission, and we need to elect women up and down the ticket in every state in this country. We must get this job done to elect Kamala Harris President United States, and we need all of you to do it.”

    RepresentWomen follows Shirley Chisholm’s example

    The keynote speaker was U.S. Representative Barbara Lee. Lee, a Democrat from California, represents the 12th Congressional District which encompasses Oakland. She was the first Black woman north of Los Angeles to be elected to the California legislature in 1990. Lee’s inspiration to run for office came from a visit by Shirley Chisolm, the first Black American  woman to run for President, to her college campus. Lee, at the time, was not interested in joining any political party or registering to vote. 

    “So she took me to task and made me register to vote,” explained Lee. “She also told me that she had something to contribute. Like what? You know, I’m out here struggling, trying to make ends meet and trying to work to make my community better as a community worker.  Like I said, ‘with the Black things, right?’ So what happened, though, she forced me to register, but I did. I ended up going back to talking to my professor. Then, I worked in Shirley’s campaign at the Mills College campus. I got an A in the class, I registered to vote, and I went to Miami as a Shirley Chisholm delegate.”

    U.S. Representative Barbara Lee, D-California, appears during an event by RepresentWomen on Tuesday, August 20, 2024 at the Hubbard Inn in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    Benchmarks and Goals

    Based on the conversations during the convention, RepresentWomen are pushing for the following additional resources to support candidates:

    1. Training and guidance on implementing ranked choice voting and public financing campaigns at the local and state levels.
    2. Connections to other organizations and advocates working on these issues to facilitate collaboration and knowledge-sharing.
    3. Research and data on the benefits of ranked choice voting and public financing in increasing women’s representation in elected office.
    4. Funding and financial support to help candidates and organizations pursue these policy changes.
    5. Advocacy and lobbying efforts at the state and federal level to promote legislation enabling ranked choice voting and public financing.

    The key is for RepresentWomen to leverage its expertise, network, and resources to empower candidates and organizations working to create the systemic changes necessary for more women to succeed in running for office.

    What is ranked choice voting?

    Voters can list candidates on their ballots by order of preference. They can rank as many candidates as they want without fear that ranking others will hurt the chances of their favorite candidate.  All first choices are counted and if a candidate receives more than half (50 percent plus one vote) of the first choices, that candidate wins, just like in any other election. 

    If there is no majority winner after counting first choices, the election will be decided by an “instant runoff.” 

    The candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated, and voters who picked that candidate as their top choice will have their next choice counted. 

    This process continues until there’s a majority winner or a candidate won with more than half of the vote.

    Just two states — Maine and Alaska — have switched to ranked choice voting for both statewide and presidential elections. New York City also utilizes ranked choice voting. Democrats have said it best aggregates candidates and their converging interests. As a result, the city has women as the majority in the city council for the first time in its history. 

    “Local elections are the worst, where only a few 100 people come out to vote, and so you have people that don’t have the majority of support,” says Laura Murphy, the Assistant Majority Leader in the Illinois State Senate. “And what happens is that you prevent women — particularly women of color — being able to win those seats. So when you can rank those choices, you have a better opportunity for winning and being successful.”

    Women in office yields results

    New York State Senator Samra Brouk appears during an event by RepresentWomen on Tuesday, August 20, 2024 at the Hubbard Inn in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    New York State Senator Samra Brouk represents the 55th District, which contains portions of Rochester. Brouk worked on Stacey Abrams’s campaign in rural Georgia, in 2018. She says Abrams’ ability to connect with people on issues like health care and criminal justice reform inspired her. This experience motivated Brouk to bring similar efforts to upstate New York. Eventually, Brouk would run for State Senate in 2022. Brouk emphasizes the value of women in elected office. She highlights studies that show women and women of color are better at understanding the needs of their constituents. Lastly, she advocates for more women in leadership roles nationwide.

    “I’m a firm believer that the more women we have in elected office, the better off we are as a country,” says Brouk. “And in fact, there are actual studies that show when women and women of color are in positions of power, they are better able to  collaborate and work together with their colleagues, even across the aisle, to affect change.”

    There are 18 state senates in across the country don’t have a Black woman elected to a state’s upper chamber. RepresentWomen has the data, but they also have the solution: leveraging connections and networks to run for public office. Also, advocating for the solutions in the systemic changes. Brouk says representation matters.

    “Truly understand the voices and the needs of the people that they represent,” says Brouk. “So whether it’s in New York, Oklahoma or Georgia, we need to make sure that more women are getting into these positions to be able to put forward the agenda that most Americans actually want to see.”

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • DC Board of Elections OKs placing ranked choice voting, opening primaries to independents on ballot – WTOP News

    DC Board of Elections OKs placing ranked choice voting, opening primaries to independents on ballot – WTOP News

    The District of Columbia’s Board of Elections has decided that voters should choose whether they want to institute ranked choice voting and open primary elections to independent voters.

    Visit WTOP’s Election 2024 page for our comprehensive coverage. Listen live to 103.5 FM for the latest. Sign up for WTOP’s Election Desk newsletter for headlines and analysis from now until Inauguration Day.

    The District of Columbia’s Board of Elections has decided that voters should choose whether they want to institute ranked choice voting and open primary elections to independent voters.

    On Friday, the board went along with the recommendations of its executive director, Monica Evans, and approved Initiative 83, also known as the “Ranked Choice Voting and Open the Primary Elections to Independent Voters Act of 2024,” which would place the item on the November general election ballot.

    BOE senior policy adviser Alice Miller, speaking on behalf of Evans, said more than 35,000 eligible signatures were received on petitions to put the issues on the ballot, far more than the 5% minimum of registered voters.

    Under ranked choice voting, rather than the current process of casting a single vote, a voter can choose their favorite candidate, then rank back up choices second, third, fourth and fifth.

    The measure would also allow independent voters to cast a ballot in a primary election. Currently, only registered Democrats and Republicans are allowed to vote in each of their party’s primaries.

    In a statement, Lisa D.T. Rice, with the group Make All Votes Count DC — which advocated for ranked choice voting — thanked the Board of Elections for validating tens of thousands of D.C. voters’ signatures.

    “These and many more D.C. voters have told us how Initiative 83 would finally give independents a vote in the primary, as well as allow all D.C. voters to use ranked choice voting to hold politicians accountable to a majority of voters,” said Rice.

    BOE Chairman Gary Thompson said the agency doesn’t take a position on either issue.

    “Take the issue to the voters. At the end of the day, it’s an initiative about how voters should vote,” Thompson said. “And who should decide how voters should vote, (but) the voters.”

    Thompson said each side has “excellent and reasonable arguments” to take to the voters, whether they prefer to change voting procedures.

    “Educate them,” Thompson said. “People have heard about this, but I think our voters have a long way to go before November to really hear out both sides.”

    Thompson said he looks forward to hearing both sides of the argument on whether to implement ranked choice voting and allow independents to vote in primaries.

    He said he too remains undecided “like probably a lot of people in D.C.”

    The act will take effect after a 30-day period of Congressional review under the Home Rule Act, which allows the District government to pass local laws.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Neal Augenstein

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  • DC initiative brings the prospect of ranked choice voting to the forefront again – WTOP News

    DC initiative brings the prospect of ranked choice voting to the forefront again – WTOP News

    If passed, the initiative would implement ranked choice voting for all elections and primaries starting in June 2026. This allows you to vote for your favorite candidate and then rank the rest as backups.

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    DC initiative brings the prospect of ranked choice voting to the forefront

    Voters in the District could be asked whether they would like to open party primaries to independents and begin ranked choice voting after organizers of a new initiative aiming to do just that submitted thousands of signatures this month.

    Now, they have to wait for the D.C. Board of Elections to approve or reject the initiative that could appear on ballots come November.

    Lisa D.T. Rice, the proposer of Initiative 83, alongside her group, The YES on 83 Campaign, gathered and submitted around 40,000 signatures from across all eight D.C. wards to the Board of Elections on July 1.

    “What that really shows is that we have support across the city,” Rice told WTOP.

    If passed, the initiative would implement ranked choice voting for all elections and primaries starting in June 2026. This allows you to vote for your favorite candidate and then rank the rest as backups. That way, if your top candidate is in last place, your vote automatically moves to the next choice available.

    Rice told WTOP that many voters got on board after witnessing the crowded Democratic primary for a Ward 7 council member, which had 10 candidates.

    “Sometimes life hands you a gift. And I have to tell you, that Ward 7 primary, though it was frustrating for voters, was a gift to this campaign,” she said. “There were, from the perspective of voters that I talked to, four or five really strong — really, really strong candidates. They didn’t like the fact that they could only choose one.”

    This is not the first time ranked choice voting has been considered. In 2021, it was proposed through the VOICE Amendment Act, but the D.C. Democratic Party came out against it, stating, “The District faces a substantial challenge with undervoting, which would be exacerbated by ranked choice voting.”

    Initiative 83 also opens primaries to people that are not registered to that party. Currently, you must be registered as either a Democrat or Republican in order to vote in one of their primaries.

    “I’m an independent, I’m not affiliated with any party, which means I am blocked from exercising my constitutional right to vote,” Rice said. “You hear from a couple of people who said, ‘It’s our primary you shouldn’t be able to vote,’ but as long as it’s taxpayer funded, I should be able to vote.”

    A Democratic group has already launched a campaign against Initiative 83. Its website states Initiative 83 “is an attempt to dilute and destroy the Democratic Vote in the District” and “closed primaries provide a safeguard against potential interference from individuals who do not share the Democratic party’s values.”

    The D.C. Board of Elections accepted the Initiative 83 petition and it’s currently reviewing petition signatures. The board has until Aug. 5 to determine the sufficiency of the petition and whether it will appear on D.C. ballots for the Nov. 5 election.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • Possibility of ranked-choice voting in Colorado faces a hurdle with new law

    Possibility of ranked-choice voting in Colorado faces a hurdle with new law

    DENVER (AP) — Colorado Gov. Jared Polis has signed a bill that would impose another hurdle for the implementation of ranked-choice voting, which may be on the November ballot.

    The new law would require that the system first be tested at a municipal level, delaying implementation.

    Politics

    Colorado Supreme Court allows open primary, ranked-choice voting to move forward

    7:51 AM, Jun 06, 2024

    The system would allow voters to rank candidates instead of choosing just one. Polis tried to quell fears by saying that if voters pass the ballot measure, they will work swiftly to implement it even with the new requirements.

    Colorado group calls for ranked choice voting in future elections


    The Follow Up

    What do you want Denver7 to follow up on? Is there a story, topic or issue you want us to revisit? Let us know with the contact form below.

    Jesse Bedayn, Associated Press/Report for America

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  • A Radical Idea for Fixing Congress

    A Radical Idea for Fixing Congress

    For most Americans, voting for a member of Congress is one of their simplest civic duties. Every two years, they pick the candidate they like best—usually the same one they chose last time—and whoever gets the most votes will represent them and a few hundred thousand of their neighbors in the House of Representatives. In nearly every case, the winner is a Republican or Democrat, and whichever party captures the most seats secures a governing majority.

    That basic process has defined congressional elections for much of the past century. But according to a growing number of political-reform advocates, it has outlasted its effectiveness and could prove ruinous for American democracy if left in place. They blame the current winner-take-all system for driving U.S. politics toward dangerous levels of polarization. Without radical change, they say, the damage could be irreversible. “Our democracy is on a pretty troubling trajectory right now over the next decade or two,” says Lee Drutman, a political scientist and senior fellow at the left-leaning New America Foundation, “and all of the problems that we’re experiencing are only going to get more intense.”

    Drutman is a co-founder of Fix Our House, a group that envisions a new configuration for the lower chamber of Congress in which districts would elect several representatives, not just one. Most states would have fewer but larger districts, and unlike America’s current system, a district wouldn’t simply be won by the party with the most votes; instead, its multiple seats would be parceled out according to the percentage of the vote that each party gets. This means that previously niche parties would suddenly have a shot at winning seats. The system is known as proportional representation. If implemented, its backers believe it could help transform America into a multiparty democracy.

    Advocates for proportional representation acknowledge that such a radical change is a long shot, at least in the immediate future. Multimember House districts actually have an extensive history in the U.S., but it’s not one remembered fondly. Congress outlawed their use at the federal level during the civil-rights era, after southern states exploited the rules to disenfranchise Black voters. Proponents say they’d ensure that the same thing doesn’t happen again, and they’ve won the support of some civil-rights activists who believe that under the right legal parameters, multimember districts could significantly expand Black representation. Another challenge for the movement is that Israel, a frequently cited example of a multiparty system that uses proportional representation, has recently experienced no less political instability than the U.S.

    That such an idea has gained a following is a reflection of just how frustrated election experts have grown with the fractured state of American politics, and how worried some of them are for the future. They believe—or at least hope—that a new season of reform in the U.S. will make possible proposals that were once deemed unachievable.

    Supporters of proportional representation—which is used in advanced democracies such as Australia, Israel, and countries throughout Europe—view the system as a prerequisite for breaking the two parties’ stranglehold on American politics. It would foster coalitional, cross-partisan governance, while larger, multimember districts would all but eliminate partisan gerrymandering. “Your enemies are never permanent. And your friends today might be your opponents tomorrow, and maybe your friends the day after,” Grant Tudor, a policy advocate at the nonpartisan group Protect Democracy, explained to me. “So there’s something structural about a multiparty [system] that depresses polarization, depresses the risk of political violence—that depresses extremism.”

    Take a medium-size state like Wisconsin as an example. Wisconsin has eight districts that are gerrymandered in such a way that Republicans reliably win six. Under proportional representation, the state would have fewer districts—perhaps only two, say, composed of five and three members. Less reliance on geographic boundaries would make the state harder to gerrymander, and when combined with proportional representation, its elections would likely be far more competitive. The results, therefore, would be more reflective of Wisconsin’s closely divided population.

    Larger, ideologically diverse states such as California and New York might elect representatives from the Working Families Party or the Green Party; Texas could send Libertarian members to Washington. In 2020, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told a reporter that “in any other country, Joe Biden and I would not be in the same party, but in America, we are.” In a multiparty democracy, they wouldn’t have to be.

    Voters across the country have shown a willingness in recent years to experiment with new ways of electing their leaders. California and Washington State have scrapped partisan primaries. Maine has adopted ranked-choice voting for federal elections—which allows voters to list candidates in order of preference—as have New York City, San Francisco, and many other municipalities for local offices. Alaska uses a combination of nonpartisan primaries and ranked-choice voting, and Nevada has taken the first step toward approving a similar system.

    The changes that Fix Our House has in mind for Congress are far more dramatic. They’re also much harder to carry out. Drutman knows that the U.S. is unlikely to adopt multimember districts particularly soon. But he believes that other election reforms such as nonpartisan primaries and ranked-choice voting simply don’t go far enough. They can’t save American democracy, he told me. “You’re bringing buckets to a flood.”

    Election reformers are a polite bunch. When I asked them about ideas other than their own, they were hesitant to be too harsh. That’s partly out of necessity. When your goal is reducing partisanship and polarization in politics, slinging insults doesn’t exactly help the cause. So they applaud almost any proposal as long as it represents an improvement over the status quo, which to them is pretty much anything.

    Yet this public bonhomie masks a vigorous competition of ideas—and a jostling for resources—over the best way to create a more representative government. Perhaps the biggest rival to proportional representation is final-four voting, the system that Alaska adopted through a statewide referendum in 2020. Instead of separate party primaries, all candidates run in a first round of balloting. The top four advance to the general election, which is decided through ranked-choice voting. Developers of final-four voting celebrated when, under the new process last year, far-right candidates lost two key races. Moderate Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski staved off a challenge from the right, and moderate Democrat Mary Peltola defeated Sarah Palin, the right-wing former Alaska governor and 2008 GOP vice-presidential nominee, in a race for the House. Peltola became the first Democrat to hold the seat in 50 years.

    In November, Nevadans voted to approve a similar system that will go into effect if another statewide referendum passes in 2024. The initiatives in Alaska and Nevada emerged from an idea developed by Katherine Gehl, a Wisconsin businesswoman who has donated millions to centrist causes and helped bankroll the ballot campaigns in both states. Gehl is adamant that combining nonpartisan primaries with ranked-choice voting is a better reform than proportional representation, both on the merits and for the simple reason that her idea has already shown results. “We’re getting as good a grade as we could possibly get at this point,” she told me.

    Gehl and Drutman basically agree on the core problem. Because of gerrymandering and the natural clustering of like-minded people, about 90 percent of House elections are noncompetitive come November, according to an analysis by Fix Our House, having already been decided in low-turnout primaries dominated by the parties’ most ideological voters. Very few Americans, then, have a real say in who represents them in the House. Once elected, politicians tend to be more concerned about losing their next primary than losing their next general election. As a result, they legislate according to the wishes of the small sliver of the electorate that put them in office rather than the much broader pool of constituents who make up their district. This reduces the motivation to compromise and deepens polarization.

    Gehl argues that to fix the system, a reform needs to both increase the number of people who cast meaningful votes for their representatives and motivate those legislators to deliver results on issues that matter to most people. Proportional representation, she told me, achieves the first goal but not the second. In a multiparty system, Gehl said, many lawmakers would feel just as beholden to a tiny portion of their constituents as do today’s primary-obsessed legislators. “If you just get better representation but you don’t look at why we’re not getting results, people will feel better represented as the Titanic sinks,” she said.

    Advocates for Gehl’s system also point out that proportional representation would do nothing to alter incentives to legislate in the U.S. Senate, where hyperpartisanship and filibustering have stymied action on a range of issues. And they question Drutman’s push for more parties at a time when more and more Americans are identifying as political independents. “It’s actually a fanciful and incorrect assessment of American politics to believe that there’s a huge demand for more parties,” says Dmitri Mehlhorn, a senior fellow at the Progressive Policy Institute who, along with his business partner, the LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, has invested in Gehl’s reform efforts. Her vision, Mehlhorn told me, “is not quite a magic bullet,” but it has more promise than the other reforms.

    Drutman doesn’t see it that way. The final-four system might work well for Alaska, he said, but Alaska, with its relatively depolarized politics and unusually large number of independent voters, is not a representative state. Nor is it clear, he noted, that the new system made a decisive difference in Murkowski’s and Peltola’s victories last year. “I think those reforms are pushing up against the limits of what they can achieve,” Drutman said. “Nonpartisan primaries have not really changed anything at all.”

    Beyond the friendly rivalry with other reform proposals, advocates for proportional representation must confront the much peskier problem of getting it enacted. In interviews, champions of the idea were excited to inform me that all it takes to allow states to experiment anew with multimember House districts is an act of Congress, not a constitutional amendment—as if approving a major election reform will be a piece of cake for a legislature that regularly struggles to keep the government open.

    States have been required to elect only one representative per district since 1967, when Congress banned multimember districts to stop southern states from using a version of the system to ensure that white candidates won House seats. Fix Our House wants Congress to amend the law in a way that allows states to adopt multimember districts without returning to the racist practices of the Jim Crow era. The organization’s allies in the civil-rights community argue that if properly designed, multimember districts would increase representation for communities of color, including in places where they have struggled to win elections because they are dispersed throughout the population rather than concentrated in neighboring areas.

    For the moment, the idea has gained little momentum on Capitol Hill. Republican leaders have become reflexively opposed to reform efforts aimed at reducing polarization, seeing them as Trojan horses designed to topple conservatives. Democrats in recent years have prioritized other election-related proposals focused on expanding access to the ballot, tightening campaign-finance rules, and banning partisan gerrymandering.

    The closest legislative proposal to what Fix Our House has in mind is the Fair Representation Act, a bill that Democratic Representative Don Beyer of Virginia has introduced several times to combine multimember districts with ranked-choice voting. But Beyer has struggled to win more than a handful of co-sponsors even within his own party.

    Most election-reform victories have come through citizen-driven ballot initiatives, which exist only on the state and local levels, as opposed to national legislation that would require support from leaders of the major parties. An idea like proportional representation, Beyer told me, is more popular with whichever party is out of power. “It appeals to Republicans in Massachusetts who’ve never gotten elected, and Democrats in Oklahoma,” he said. “So the appeal is to people on the outside, not the people who are making the laws.”

    Adding to the difficulty is the fact that advocates for proportional representation don’t necessarily share the same vision for what a new system would look like. For example, Beyer is reluctant to embrace Drutman’s ultimate goal of multiparty, coalition government in the House, viewing it as a step too far in the U.S. “It’s emphatically not the specific goal,” he said. “Talking European-type coalition governments would be a deal killer here.”

    Advocates for proportional representation also disagree on whether it needs to be paired with a perhaps equally ambitious reform: significantly increasing the number of seats in the House. (Drutman has advocated for adding House seats to account for substantial population increases since the number was set at 435 nearly a century ago, but Fix Our House believes that proportional representation would be beneficial even at its current size.)

    Despite scant support among politicians, proportional representation has been gaining momentum within the reform community. The groups Protect Democracy and Unite America recently published a report examining the idea, and another advocacy group, FairVote, has begun to reemphasize proportional representation after years of focusing mostly on ranked-choice voting. Last year, voters in Portland, Oregon, approved the use of multimember districts (and ranked-choice voting) for the city council. Multimember districts have also generated discussion among Republican state legislators in Wyoming, one of the nation’s most conservative states, although the idea has yet to move forward there.

    Reformers tend to downplay the long odds of their campaigns, but the leaders of Fix Our House are surprisingly candid about their near-term chances of success, or lack thereof. “It’s clear that there’s no path to major structural reform in Congress right now,” a co-founder of the group, Eli Zupnick, told me. He said that Fix Our House wants to “lay the groundwork for this policy to move when the moment is right.” That means promoting the idea to other advocates, lawmakers, and opinion makers so that if there’s, say, a presidential or congressional commission to study different ideas, proportional representation makes it into the conversation.

    One of the group’s models is the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which began as an idea that Elizabeth Warren, then a Harvard professor, promoted for years before Democrats included it during their package of banking reforms following the 2008 financial crisis. “It’s funny how things can go from off the wall to on the shelf,” Drutman said.

    Left unsaid is the fact that it took an economic collapse to muscle the new federal agency into law and that the CFPB remains a target for Republicans more than a decade later. Fix Our House launched about a year after January 6, 2021, when the nation’s polarization triggered a violent attempt to overturn a presidential election. Supporters of proportional representation acknowledged that the moment they are preparing for, when the country is finally ready to overhaul the way it elects its leaders, might not be a happy one. “The most obvious way you get big change,” Beyer told me, grimly, “is catastrophe.”

    Russell Berman

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