CANCELED: 2023 Community Forum: Ranked-Choice Voting

CANCELED: 2023 Community Forum: Ranked-Choice Voting

2023 Community Forum: Ranked-Choice Voting

Location

Blacksburg Town Council Building
300 South Main Street
Blacksburg Virginia 24060
Virginia US
Wednesday, October 4, 2023 - 7:00pm

This event has been canceled, to be rescheduled.

At a time when Americans are seeking ways to reduce political division, ranked-choice voting is an election method several states and localities are considering to encourage more collegial campaigning.

This year’s Community Forum, sponsored by the League of Women Voters, Virginia Tech’s Lifelong Learning Institute, and the NAACP-Montgomery Co-Radford City-Floyd Co Branch will explore the option of ranked-choice voting through the perspective of two voting experts.

The forum is on Wednesday, October 4th, at 7 p.m. in Blacksburg’s Town Council Chambers. The event is free and open to the public.

Liz White, executive director of UpVote Virginia, and Dr. Caitlin Jewitt, assistant professor of political science at Virginia Tech, will explain and analyze the electoral method of ranked-choice voting.

UpVote Virginia is a nonpartisan organization promoting ranked-choice voting as the way to improve the structure of our electoral system and better reflect the will of voters.

Dr. Jewitt is recognized for her research on campaigns and elections, public opinion, political parties, and presidential primaries and caucuses. She is particularly interested in the institutional features of elections and their effects on voters, election outcomes, and candidate strategy.

With ranked-choice voting,  voters rank all candidates in an election rather than choosing one. Ranked choice voting is described as a means to a more representative and inclusive government and a way to reduce negative campaigning. The need for costly runoff elections is bypassed because the candidate who garners more than 50% of the vote wins. If no one gets a majority of votes, the candidate with the fewest votes is dropped and his or her votes are redistributed to the other candidates. Voters whose candidate is eliminated then have their second choice counted.

Ranked-choice voting was used this spring in Arlington in the Democratic primary, but the Arlington County Board decided not to use the increasingly popular voting system for November’s general election.  The Democratic primary was the first publicly run ranked-choice election in Virginia, offering a highly visible test for a voting system that’s been used in a growing number of races around the country.

Issues referenced by this event: