The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

How Alaska’s unique new election system works

- By Becky Bohrer

Alaska elections will be held for the first time this year under a unique new system that scraps party primaries and uses ranked choice voting in general elections.

The Alaska Supreme Court last week upheld the system, narrowly approved by voters in 2020.

It calls for an open primary in which all candidates for a given race appear on the ballot, regardless of party affiliatio­n, followed by ranked voting in the general election. No other state conducts its elections with this combinatio­n, which applies to both state and federal races.

Supporters hope the new system will help ease partisan rancor and encourage civility and cooperatio­n among elected officials. Critics worry it will dilute the power of political parties, or that minor party candidates will get drowned out. Some are skeptical, too, that the system will work as intended.

Here is a closer look at what’s happening in Alaska:

How does the process work?

In the past, the winners of each party’s respective primary advanced to the general election.

Under the new system, there will be one ballot, available to all registered voters, with each candidate in a given race. The top four vote-getters, regardless of party affiliatio­n, head to the general election.

Voters in the general election then can rank candidates by order of preference.

A consensus winner is selected if no one wins more than 50% of the first choices.

Another change: Candidates for governor and lieutenant governor will team up at the outset. Previously, candidates for each office ran separately for the primary, and the winners of each party primary were paired for the general election.

Maine uses ranked voting for state-level primary elections, and for federal

offices only in general elections.

Which races are affected in Alaska?

All state and federal races are subject to the new rules. That includes this year’s races for U.S. Senate, Alaska’s lone U.S. House seat, governor and lieutenant governor and legislativ­e seats.

Some have seen the system as potentiall­y helping Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who has a reputation as a moderate and has at times been at odds with Alaska party leaders, including in her criticism of former President Donald Trump.

Murkowski lost her party primary to a tea party candidate, Joe Miller, in 2010 but won the general election with a write-in campaign. She

won her primary easily in 2016, the year Trump was elected.

Trump has backed Republican Kelly Tshibaka for this year’s Senate race, and Tshibaka has been endorsed by state party leaders.

Why do this?

Scott Kendall, an attorney who helped write the Alaska ballot initiative, said the new system gives voters choices. The reason for ranked voting is to avoid “distorted” outcomes, he said.

If there were four candidates under the prior system, “you can imagine someone winning with 28% of the vote and being a very extreme individual because three moderates over here divvied up the rest of the vote,” Kendall said.

 ?? MARK THIESSEN/AP ?? Attorney Scott Kendall stands next to the State of Alaska certificat­e for the election reforms he helped author in a successful ballot initiative.
MARK THIESSEN/AP Attorney Scott Kendall stands next to the State of Alaska certificat­e for the election reforms he helped author in a successful ballot initiative.

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