From Ashley Houghton, FairVote <[email protected]>
Subject A new David Daley book and two new reports on election reform
Date August 8, 2024 5:35 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
The past few weeks have been a thrilling time for FairVote. Ranked choice
voting is likely to appear on the November ballot in four states and four cities
– and has an exciting set of new (and newly prominent) endorsements! Donate
Today!


Dear John,

The past few weeks have been a thrilling time for FairVote. Ranked choice voting
(RCV) is likely toappear on the November ballot in four states and four cities –
and has an exciting set of new (andnewly prominent)endorsements!

Together with our sister organizationFairVote Action, we’ll have more to share
on these developments later this month – but today we’re excited to announce two
new reports, and anew book by FairVote’s own David Daley!

Read on to learn about plurality wins in this year’s primaries, how to make the
most out of multi-winner RCV elections, and David’s new book, Antidemocratic.

“FEWEST VOTES WINS” IN 2024 PRIMARIES
In our current single-choice voting system, a candidate can win an election with
far less than 50% of the vote, meaning a majority of voters supported someone
other than the winner. That presents two major problems for our elections:

* If the candidate is in a district safe for their party, they’ve essentially
secured an office with just a fraction of a fraction of their constituents
behind them.
* If the candidate is in a competitive district, they enter the general
election weaker, without most of their party behind them.

Ranked choice voting would solve both problems, helping candidates win their
primaries with a majority of votes and sending them into the general election
stronger.

Last Friday, FairVote published a report on 49 statewide and congressional
primaries that were won with less than 50% of the vote. They included winners
from both parties, and spanned all across the country. 24 of those primary
winners are heavily favored to win their general elections, while 12 are heading
into competitive contests. In several open seat contests, both major party
nominees won their primaries without majority support. You can watch a short
video about the reporthere.

Since we published that report, the number of plurality winners has grown even
more! Notably, Missouri’s Republican primaries for governor, lieutenant
governor, secretary of state, and treasurer were won by candidates with less
than 50% of the vote. In such a deep-red state, these primary winners are all
but certain to win their general elections – making a clear case for RCV.

REPORT: HOW TO GET THE MOST OUT OF MULTI-WINNER RCV
Ranked choice voting makes elections fairer. It can be used in elections with
one winner, like for mayor or governor, and elections with multiple winners,
like city council or school board. When adopting RCV for multi-winner elections,
there are simple ways to maximize its benefits.

Yesterday, FairVote and RepresentUs released anew policy guide that presents
recommendations to get the most out of multi-winner RCV. The recommendations
include:

* Using proportional RCV for multi-winner offices. Proportional RCV means every
community or ideological group gets representation that corresponds with its
share of the population – this is what we should want in our democracy!
* Electing 3-5 seats at a time is the best way to maximize the benefits. That’s
the “sweet spot” for multi-winner elections. If a community is only electing
two seats, it won’t get the full benefits of proportional representation.
* Allowing candidates to form slates – like “Springfielders for Safe Streets” –
and list those slates on the ballot if local law allows. Those labels are
helpful for voters in nonpartisan races.

Read the full policy guidehere.

NEW BOOK BY FAIRVOTE’S DAVID DALEY
Antidemocratic, a new book by FairVote Senior Fellow David Daley, is out now!
Antidemocraticfollows the weakening of the Voting Rights Act through Supreme
Court decisions like Shelby County vs. Holder. The book has already attracted
significantmedia attention, including excerpts inThe Boston Globe,The Atlantic,
andSlate, as well as David's appearance onMorning Joe.

David is an expert on gerrymandering and voting rights, and regularly writes
about how reforms likeproportional ranked choice votingand theFair
Representation Actwould mitigate gerrymandering and empower minority voters. He
writes that:

“FairVote’s passion is fair representation, and ensuring that every American
casts votes in meaningful elections, and that all of our voices are heard
equally. That’s the same animating spirit behind my new book, Antidemocratic.
Abraham Lincoln, in his first inaugural, said that the ‘candid citizen must
confess’ that if the law and our rights were ‘irrevocably fixed’ by the Supreme
Court, ‘the people will have ceased to be their own rulers.’ No nine people in a
democracy should hold such power, unelected and for life.

“The book explores a five-decade history of decisions on the Voting Rights Act,
redistricting and more that have concentrated more power in the hands of the
court, less with the people, and pushed our elections to be more expensive and
less competitive. It begins with the belief that the Reconstruction amendments
and the Voting Rights Act are the beating heart that drives America’s highest
ideals, and that the judicial erosion of those amendments and the steady
shrinking of the VRA does damage to the dream of a more perfect union, with
liberty and justice for all.”


The Voting Rights Act has a long history of bipartisan support, and was
reauthorized by Congress on five occasions between its initial passage in 1965
and 2006. The 2006 reauthorization even passed the Senate with unanimous
support. With its 59th anniversary happening this week, now is the perfect time
to learn about its importance and the ongoing threat to its protections.

Order your copy of Antidemocratic today!


Thank you for reading! As the fall elections approach, we’ll continue to bring
you all the latest news about the ranked choice voting movement!

Sincerely,
Ashley Houghton
Chief Program Officer

Donate Today Copyright © 2024 FairVote, All rights reserved.




Our mailing address is:

8484 Georgia Ave, Suite 240, Silver Spring, MD 20910




Want to change how you receive these emails?

You can unsubscribe from this list.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Fair Vote
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • SendGrid