In the US, winner-take-all voting has created A LOT of political polarization. But what if rather than voting for one candidate, you could rank all of them so if your first choice doesn’t win, your vote goes to your second choice? So long, pola
Sandy Maisel from Colby College and The Committee for Ranked Choice Voting joins Andrew Maynard and Heather Ross to talk about the initiative to bring ranked choice voting to Maine elections and the RCV experience in the 2018 election cycle.
This week we take a look at ranked choice voting, how it works and where it came from. And we’ll look at the big question: how could it impact our country. A special thanks to our Patreon supporter Max who inspired this episode.Subscribe to our
If you’re voting in San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley or San Leandro ... you get three votes! Kind of. Today, we explain how ranked-choice voting works, why some people like it, why some people hate it, and how politicians can win even if they c
Sarah is a big fan of the idea of ranked choice voting. We talked through it all and thought about what kind of a problem this could actually solve and what it could mean for today's political system.
Ranked Choice Voting might sound like a cute little niche, but it actually changed the outcome of an election in Maine this year. Sarah Brady Wagner and Hodey Johns dive into what it is, how it would have made Gary Johnson president, and where
Chris Hughes and Morgan Chance talk about how ranked choice voting was used in the early 20th century and what that can tell us about ranked choice voting today. Episode transcript: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xCGlfzvjVDKzS8bfiLQhLuYPXvY