Greenwich Time

Ranked choice voting OK’d in Maine

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PORTLAND, Maine — Ranked choice voting will be used for the first time in a presidenti­al race in the U.S. under a ruling Tuesday by the Maine Supreme Court, which concluded a GOP-led petition drive intended to prevent its use came up short.

The Supreme Judicial Court concluded the Maine Republican Party failed to reach the threshold of signatures needed for a “People’s Veto” referendum aimed at rejecting a state law that expands ranked choice voting to the presidenti­al election.

“This is a powerful moment for ranked choice voting supporters: Voters will, for the first time, use ranked choice voting to elect the highest office in the country,” said Rob Richie, president and CEO of FairVote, which advocates for the voting reform.

The court’s decision, just six weeks before the election, was issued after the state already began printing ballots using a gridstyle for ranked elections.

“As we have already printed the ballots, due to the federal deadlines we must meet to provide ballots for overseas and military voters, this decision comes as a great relief and avoids the complicati­ons, confusion and expense that would have arisen from reprinting and reissuing ballots,” said Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap.

Under the voting system, voters are allowed to rank all candidates on the ballot. If no one wins a majority of first-place votes, then there are additional tabulation­s, aided by computers, in which last-place finishers are eliminated and votes reallocate­d based on those supporters’ second-place choices.

The tabulation­s could delay results by a week.

In Maine, the presidenti­al ballot will feature five names, including Republican President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

Ranked voting will also be used in U.S. House races and the closely watched U.S. Senate race between Republican incumbent Susan Collins and Democrat Sara Gideon, the Maine House speaker.

The voting system adds another wrinkle to the presidenti­al contest in Maine, which — as one of two states that divide electoral votes — already does things differentl­y.

In the last presidenti­al election, Democrat Hillary Clinton won three electoral votes while Trump won one electoral vote in the 2nd Congressio­nal District, underscori­ng political divisions between the state’s liberal, urban south and conservati­ve north.

The ranked choice voting system, approved by Maine voters in 2016, has become a partisan issue in the state, where Republican U.S. Rep. Bruce Poliquin was ousted in 2018 despite collecting the most first-place votes.

Supporters say the ranked choice voting system eliminates the impact of so-called “spoiler candidates” and produces a majority winner. Critics say it’s unnecessar­ily complicate­d. They have also argued that it disenfranc­hises voters who don’t understand it.

The constituti­onality of the voting system has been twice upheld by a federal judge in Maine. However, ranked voting is not used in the governor’s race or legislativ­e contests because it runs afoul of the Maine Constituti­on.

The fast-paced, 11th-hour legal machinatio­ns resolved Tuesday followed the secretary of state’s rejection of the referendum, ruling the GOP fell short of the needed level of 67,067 signatures of registered voters to force a referendum. The Maine GOP had appealed that decision and a state judge reinstated enough signatures to surpass the minimum by 22 signatures.

The issue before the state Supreme Court focused on a narrow question of whether signature gatherers must be registered to vote in the town where they are circulatin­g petitions at the time they started.

The Supreme Judicial Court ruled unanimousl­y Tuesday that the requiremen­ts don’t violate First Amendment rights of signature gatherers. That conclusion invalidate­d 988 signatures, delivering a defeat to the GOP.

The Maine GOP and its lead attorney on the appeal didn’t immediatel­y return email messages and phone calls seeking comment.

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