Chattanooga Times Free Press

Senators move to ban expansion of ranked-choice

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — 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.”

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