The Columbus Dispatch

Ranked-choice voting might save our politics

- David Brooks writes for The New York Times. newsservic­e@nytimes.com

four-party system. There were liberal Republican­s from places like the Northeast and conservati­ve Republican­s from the West. There were liberal Democrats on the coasts and conservati­ve Democrats from the South. The four groups floated into different legislativ­e coalitions depending on the issue and the moment.

Now the two-party system has rigidified and ossified. The two parties no longer bend to the center. They push to the extremes, where the donor bases and their media propaganda arms are. More and more people feel politicall­y homeless, alienated from both parties and without any say in how the country is run.

Moreover, the whole way of practicing politics has been transforme­d. Each party imagines that it is one wave election from destroying the other side and gaining total power. Therefore, as Drutman notes, there’s no interest in compromise.

The result is that people, especially the young, lose faith in democratic norms altogether. There are more than 6,000 breweries in America, but when it comes to our politics, we get to choose between Soviet Refrigerat­or Factory A and Soviet Refrigerat­or Factory B.

The good news is that we don’t have to live with this system. There’s nothing in the Constituti­on that says there have to be only two parties. There’s nothing in the Constituti­on about parties at all. There’s not even anything in the Constituti­on mandating that each congressio­nal district have only one member and be represente­d by one party. We could have a much fairer and better system with the passage of a law.

The way to do that is through multimembe­r districts and ranked-choice voting. In populous states, the congressio­nal districts would be bigger, with around three to five members per district. Voters would rank the candidates on the ballot. If no candidate had a majority of first-place votes, then the candidate with the fewest first-place votes would be eliminated. Voters who preferred that candidate would have their second-choice vote counted instead. The process would be repeated until you get your winners.

This system makes it much easier for third and fourth parties to form, because voting for a third party no longer means voting for one with no chance of winning.

The process also means that people with minority views in their region have a greater chance to be represente­d in Congress. A district in Southern California, for example, might elect a Bernie Sanders-type progressiv­e, a centrist business Democrat and a conservati­ve.

The current system — wherein a vast majority of seats are safely red or blue and noncompeti­tive — disappears. Every district becomes a swing district, each vote much more important. Congress begins to work differentl­y because with multiple parties you no longer have stagnant trench warfare — you have shifting coalition-building.

Over the last few decades, a lot of work has been done to fight gerrymande­ring, a reform that would have only a marginal effect on our politics. The good news is that attention seems to be shifting to ranked-choice voting, a change that would have much bigger and better effects.

In 2016, voters in Maine passed a referendum installing ranked-choice voting. The state’s legislatur­e has done everything it can to fight it, but it looks like voters there will use the system for their June 12 primary and have a chance to make the system permanent.

Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., introduced legislatio­n in Congress last year to make this kind of system national. Groups like FairVote champion the reform nationwide, and writers like Drutman are tireless advocates.

Right now our politics is heading in a truly horrendous direction — with vicious, binary political divisions overlappin­g with and exacerbati­ng historical racial divisions. If we’re going to have just one structural reform to head off that nightmare, ranked-choice voting in multimembe­r districts is the one to choose.

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