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What is
Ranked Choice
Voting?

A coalition of political insiders and special interest groups are devising a scheme to undo our system of voting that has existed since the founding of our nation– one voter casting one vote for one candidate–with a system called Ranked Choice Voting (RCV).

What is
Ranked Choice
Voting?

A coalition of political insiders and special interest groups are devising a scheme to undo our system of voting that has existed since the founding of our nation– one voter casting one vote for one candidate–with a system called Ranked Choice Voting (RCV).

What is
Ranked Choice
Voting?

A coalition of political insiders and special interest groups are devising a scheme to undo our system of voting that has existed since the founding of our nation– one voter casting one vote for one candidate–with a system called Ranked Choice Voting (RCV).

Why is RCV bad for Arizona?

This new scheme would undermine the fundamental principle of one person, one vote that determines the winner based on who receives the most votes with a confusing, complicated ranking system that will disenfranchise voters, reduce transparency and delay election results.

Ranked Choice Voting is WRONG for Voters:

Eliminates system of one person one vote whereby the candidate that gets the most votes wins.

Creates a defect known as “Ballot Exhaustion” which allows your vote to be thrown out and not counted.

Has resulted in the wrong candidate being declared the winner in cities that have used RCV.

Results in more ballots being rejected due to mistakes made by vulnerable voters when ranking candidates.

Will make ballots much more complicated and longer for voters, increasing ballot fatigue.

Reduces transparency in our elections because tabulation process will now be a complicated algorithm that no one understands and is unverifiable.

Will take longer to vote and delays election results for over a month.

RCV is funded by wealthy, out of state special interest groups who want to change how we vote.

Ranked Choice Voting is WRONG for Voters:

Eliminates system of one person one vote whereby the candidate that gets the most votes wins.

Creates a defect known as “Ballot Exhaustion” which allows your vote to be thrown out and not counted.

Has resulted in the wrong candidate being declared the winner in cities that have used RCV.

Results in more ballots being rejected due to mistakes made by vulnerable voters when ranking candidates.

Will make ballots much more complicated and longer for voters, increasing ballot fatigue.

Reduces transparency in our elections because tabulation process will now be a complicated algorithm that no one understands and is unverifiable.

Will take longer to vote and delays election results for over a month.

RCV is funded by wealthy, out of state special interest groups who want to change how we vote.

Arizonans tried runoffss before, and quickly rejected them.

From the beginning of elections in the United States, and the beginning of elections in the state of Arizona, we have had a simple system relying on a foundational principle: 1 person, 1 vote.

Recently, partisans with desired electoral outcomes have been sweeping the nation with proposals to upend this simple and understood method of selecting our leaders and replace it with a complicated, fault-filled system known as “Ranked Choice Voting.”

Sold as the solution to all our political woes, in reality it leaves voters confused, delays election results, and leads to thousands of voters being disenfranchised when their ballots are “exhausted” prior to the last “instant run-off.”

The push is being brought here to Arizona too, but this isn’t the first time an effort has been made to “reform” our elections.

In 1988, after a rare Gubernatorial election with a popular independent candidate resulting in the election of a Governor with just under 40% of the vote, who was subsequently impeached, the legislature referred to the voters a measure to amend the constitution to require a majority vote to elect candidates to executive offices in Arizona.

The voters approved it, as Prop 105, by a vote of 56.4%-43.6%. Just two years later, the result was the first Gubernatorial runoff election in Arizona history. It was a disaster. So bad in fact, that legislators quickly referred to the voters an amendment to the constitution to undo what they had just done.

It turns out the voters agreed with lawmakers, approving in 1992 as Prop 100 the repeal of the runoff system, this time by an overwhelming margin of 67%-33%.

This has two important implications:

01.

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Arizona voters already gave run-off elections a chance and were quick and decisive in regretting and rejecting it just a few years later.

02.

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It’s clear that any kind of run-off election, including RCV’s “instantaneous run-off” model, is unconstitutional. That’s why voters had to amend the constitution in 1988 to allow it, and why in 1992 they repealed their changes, reverting the constitution back to one ensuring the candidate with the “highest number of votes” is declared elected.

Free Enterprise Club Legislative Response to Rank Choice Voting

Rep. Austin Smith

HB 2552

Would enshrine in statute the requirement that the candidate that receives the highest number of votes is declared the winner and ensures that cities, towns, and counties are prohibited from adopting a Rank Choice Voting system in Arizona.

Rep. Austin Smith

HCR 2033

A proposed Constitutional amendment that guarantees that any recognized political party in the state of Arizona has the right to nominate a candidate to appear on a general election ballot for any office on the ballot. This proposed measure would render any RCV, Jungle primary system or blend of the two systems (the Alaska Model) unconstitutional.

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