The Columbus Dispatch

Don’t blame third parties for your candidate’s defeat

- Michael Smerconish writes for The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. www.smerconish.com

Danny O’Connor by only 1,564 votes.

When the election night returns rolled in, many O’Connor supporters castigated Green Party candidate Joe Manchik, an easy foil because he’d once written that he descended “from a planet orbiting a star in the Pleiades star cluster.” Manchik garnered 1,129 votes, and some were quick to blame him for O’Connor’s apparent loss.

In the Kansas Republican gubernator­ial primary, acting Gov. Jeff Colyer waited a week before conceding to Secretary of State Kris Kobach. There the final margin was just 345 votes, which is far less than the vote total obtained by a GOP candidate too young to even vote for himself — 17-yearold Tyler Ruzich, who amassed over 2,000 votes.

Blame doesn’t properly rest with either Manchik or Roozick, two combatants like those Theodore Roosevelt had in mind when saluting those willing to enter the arena with faces marred by dust, sweat and blood. If you don’t like the outcomes in Ohio or Kansas, blame those who didn’t vote, not the predilecti­on of those who did.

It’s the same story with the 2016 presidenti­al results. If more nonvoters had voted, Hillary Clinton would have won the election, according to the Pew analysis. Simply stated, the demographi­c groups supportive of Trump turned out; those that supported Clinton made up a much greater share of nonvoters.

As noted by Pew: “Compared with validated voters, nonvoters were more likely to be younger, less educated, less affluent and nonwhite. And nonvoters were much more Democratic.

“Thirty-seven percent expressed a preference for Hillary Clinton, 30 percent for Donald Trump and 9 percent for Gary Johnson or Jill Stein; 14 percent preferred another candidate or declined to express a preference. Party affiliatio­n among nonvoters skewed even more Democratic than did candidate preference­s. Democrats and Democratic­leaning independen­ts made up a 55 percent majority of nonvoters; about 4 in 10 (41 percent) nonvoters were Republican­s and Republican leaners. Voters were split almost evenly between Democrats and Democratic leaners ( 51 percent) and Republican­s and Republican leaners (48 percent).”

On CNN last week, Jill Stein said that 60 percent of Americans have concluded that the two-party system has failed and she now supports a voting reform movement gaining traction in many American cities and one state’s election.

“There’s a small, simple voting reform that actually changes the way our votes are counted. It’s called rankchoice voting,” she said. “It was just passed by the state of Maine. Used in their primary, they had a bigger turnout than ever. It makes the point that people don’t show up to vote or they don’t vote for the establishm­ent candidates because they don’t speak to their needs.”

Voters in Maine’s statewide elections will now follow a system that is already utilized in elections in Australia, Ireland, and New Zealand, as well as in Minneapoli­s and St. Paul, and for the tabulation of military and overseas ballots in five states, plus numerous collegiate elections. Instead of facing a binary choice, these voters will rank the entire field of candidates by preference. Unless a candidate secures a majority of “first choice” votes, the candidate with the least number of votes will be dropped and his/ her votes reallocate­d to the voters’ “second choice.” The process continues until one candidate gets a majority of all votes.

Of course, if instead you’d rather blame those who ran as long shots, or those who voted for them, you would be pleasing two constituen­cies — the major parties that want to continue the status quo.

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