Current:Home > StocksGeorgia senators move to ban expansion of ranked-choice voting method in the state -WealthCenter
Georgia senators move to ban expansion of ranked-choice voting method in the state
View
Date:2025-04-20 03:34:09
ATLANTA (AP) — Ranked-choice voting is barely present in Georgia, but Lt. Gov. Burt Jones and some state senators want to keep it from expanding.
Under the voting method used in some elections in other states, voters rank their choices in order. Lower finishing candidates are then eliminated and their votes assigned to the surviving candidates until someone reaches a majority.
Supporters say the voting system could allow Georgia to avoid its system of runoff elections, required when a candidate doesn’t win. They say runoffs usually have lower turnouts than earlier rounds of voting, and that voters dislike them, especially Georgia’s unusual requirement for a runoff when no candidate wins a majority in the general election. Most states declare the highest finisher the winner in a general election, even if they don’t win a runoff.
But Georgia’s Senate Ethics Committee voted 8-1 Tuesday to ban the practice for all voters except for American citizens who vote absentee from abroad, sending the measure to full Senate for more debate. Since 2021, those citizens have cast a ranked-choice ballot because it’s impractical to send a runoff ballot abroad and get it back within the four-week window for a runoff.
Republican Sen. Randy Robertson of Cataula, the sponsor of Senate Bill 355, said the practice needs to be prohibited because voters will be confused, results will be delayed, and people who only vote for one candidate will often see their vote go uncounted. He held up a ranked choice ballot from another city and likened it to “the lottery card at Circle K where you pick your numbers.”
With the backing of the lieutenant governor, the measure is likely to pass the Senate floor, but its prospects are more uncertain in the House. Florida, Idaho, Montana, South Dakota and Tennessee have previously banned ranked-choice voting.
Robertson was supported by testimony from multiple conservative groups nationwide. Their testimony focused in part on congressional elections in Alaska and Maine where Republicans had led the first round of voting but Democrats won after second-choice votes were redistributed.
“How could you rightfully have a congressional election where someone of that persuasion won or advanced when you had a state that went so far in the other direction in the presidential election?” Jordan Kittleson of the America First Policy Institute asked of the Alaska election. He called ranked-choice voting “a confusing, chaotic system whereby the person with the most votes doesn’t always win.”
But former state Rep. Scot Turner, a libertarian-leaning Republican, said voters aren’t confused by ranked-choice voting and argued Georgia’s current runoff system is costly, with fewer voters returning to cast additional ballots.
“At a minimum, we don’t know who our winner is for a month, and we have to pay for it, $75 million, and we have a half-million people silenced by that process,” Turner said.
He also questioned, if the method was so terrible, why it’s acceptable for soldiers overseas to use it.
“If ranked choice voting is so bad, why are you subjecting our men and women in uniform to something that is confusing and would disenfranchise them?” Turner asked.
Republican Wes Cantrell, another former state House member, called the opposition “spin and misinformation.”
He said that if Georgia voters had a second choice in 2020 that Donald Trump would have won Georgia’s presidential vote, and Republican David Perdue might have retained his U.S. Senate seat. He instead lost a runoff to Democrat Jon Ossoff.
“RCV is not a partisan issue,” Cantrell said. “It doesn’t benefit Democrats or Republicans. It represents taxpayers and voters.”
He said that voters hate runoffs. “The process is flawed and it’s because we wear our voters out,” Cantrell said.
veryGood! (121)
Related
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Horoscopes Today, November 8, 2023
- Puerto Rico declares flu epidemic as cases spike. 42 dead and more than 900 hospitalized since July
- Revisiting Bears-Panthers pre-draft trade as teams tangle on 'Thursday Night Football'
- Kourtney Kardashian Cradles 9-Month-Old Son Rocky in New Photo
- An industrial robot crushed a worker to death at a vegetable packing plant in South Korea
- Missing 5-year-old found dead in pond near Rhode Island home
- Becoming Barbra: Where Streisand's star was born
- Family of explorer who died in the Titan sub implosion seeks $50M-plus in wrongful death lawsuit
- US diplomat assures Kosovo that new draft of association of Serb municipalities offers no autonomy
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's family keeps eyes on 'full justice' one month after shooting
- Israel agrees to 4-hour daily pauses in Gaza fighting to allow civilians to flee, White House says
- CIA chief William Burns heads to Qatar as efforts to contain Israel-Hamas conflict and release hostages continue
- Japanese automaker Nissan’s profits zoom on strong sales, favorable exchange rates
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Alex Galchenyuk video: NHL player threatens officers, utters racial slurs in bodycam footage
- Officials in Russia-annexed Crimea say private clinics have stopped providing abortions
- Becoming Barbra: Where Streisand's star was born
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
GOP candidates hit Trump and back Israel. Here are highlights from the Republican debate
The moon will 'smile' at Venus early Thursday morning. Here's how to see it
Powerball winning numbers for Nov. 8 drawing: No winners, jackpot rises to $220 million
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
National institute will build on New Hampshire’s recovery-friendly workplace program
SAG-AFTRA reaches tentative agreement with Hollywood studios in a move to end nearly 4-month strike
Father of Liverpool striker Luis Díaz released after his kidnapping in Colombia by ELN guerrillas