California Senate Passes Bill Letting Non-Charter Cities Use Ranked Choice Voting for their Own Elections

On May 28, the California Senate passed SB 212. It lets non-charter cities and counties use Ranked Choice Voting for their own elections, if they want to. The law already lets charter cities and counties do this.


Comments

California Senate Passes Bill Letting Non-Charter Cities Use Ranked Choice Voting for their Own Elections — 4 Comments

  1. It’s too bad so many ill-advised people are allowing the one-party system to see daylight in SF, Oakland, Maine and everywhere that uses ranked choice voting in single-winner districts (also known as IRV = instant runoff voting).

    The United Coalition USA is bringing the 539-party system in 2020, the 538-member PPR Elector College, elected under pure proportional representation.

    Go Ogle [One]
    (Not affiliated with Google One)
    http://www.usparliament.org/google2020.php

  2. I wonder, could they use another Ranked Choice Voting system other than Instant Runoff, like, say, Ranked Pairs, under this?

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