Ranked choice voting is an amazing electoral innovation that lets you mark one of the two major party candidates as your “first choice” instead of voting for them outright.
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But everyone picks their top n in order, so there is always an equal amount of choosing. If your candidate withdraws after you’ve cast your ballot in the primary, why should your vote be thrown out?
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Yes, my point is, choosing twice is common and easily understood, and everyone walks away with the same value. Remind me never to visit your icecream shop.
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My point is that it's not easily understood, and easily made to sound like some people are getting multiple choices while others get one. That doesn't doom the idea, but it does make it more challenging to persuade voters it's on the level
End of conversation
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