Nearly 15 years ago, Minneapolis became the first Minnesota city to switch to ranked-choice voting, acting as a laboratory for a new system that supporters argued would tamp down the sharp division that ails politics.
Four other Minnesota cities have since followed, and proponents say the experiment is over: The system works and Minnesota should take the next step toward implementing it for all state and federal races.
"Ranked-choice voting is tried and tested," said Jeanne Massey, executive director of FairVote Minnesota, a nonprofit that has spent nearly two decades pushing for broader use of the system. "The benefits of ranked-choice voting are not theoretical. It is one of the most effective ways to put a big dent in the division and disinformation that is undermining our democracy."
When voters rank candidates in order of preference, proponents argue, extreme candidates are penalized and coalition builders elevated. Proposals moving in the DFL-controlled House and Senate would open the door for more cities to use ranked choice in 2024 and create a task force to recommend no later than 2027 how to implement the system for statewide and national races.
Opponents of the voting method say the results have been mixed in Minnesota and across the country. Alaska and Maine use ranked-choice on a larger scale, along with some cities in other states. Republican lawmakers argue that the system is confusing and would diminish election confidence in a state where voters regularly turn out in record numbers.
A spokesperson for the Minnesota Secretary of State's office said Wednesday that the state "is not yet ready for statewide ranked-choice voting."
"The state could someday become ready, but only after a thorough examination of the structures and practices that would have to change to accommodate such a major shift in how we administer elections," spokesperson Darwin Forsyth said in an email.
The change would move Minnesota away from the plurality system in elections, where the candidate with the largest share of votes wins, and into one where multiple candidates are ranked in order of preference. If no candidate receives 50% or more of first-choice votes, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and all of that person's votes are distributed to whichever candidate those voters ranked second. That process continues until one candidate has 50% or more of the vote.