RCV trends: Four states ban RCV in 2025, bringing the number of states with bans to 15.

(Okay idk why it says 15 up here then later says 16, somebody on that site probably didn’t update the title text)

As of April 30, five states had banned RCV in 2025, which brought the total number of states that prohibit RCV to 16.

  • Gov. Mark Gordon (Republican) signed HB 165 on March 18.
  • West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey (Republican) signed SB 490 the March 19.
  • Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly (Democrat) signed SB 6 into law on April 1.
  • North Dakota Gov. Kelly Armstrong (Republican) signed HB 1297 on April 15.
  • Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders (Republican) signed HB 1706 which became law on April 17.

Six states banned RCV in 2024.

Why YSK: If you’re a US-American, its time to pay attention to State and Local politics instead of solely on the Federal. There is a trend in conservative jurisdictions to stop progress in making elecoral systems more fair. Use this opportunity as a rallying-cry to pass Ranked-Choice Voting in progressive jurisdictions, and hopefully everyone else takes notes. Sometimes, all you need is a few states adopting a law to become the catalyst for it to become the model for the entire country, for better or for worse. Don’t allow anti-RCV legislations to dominate, counter the propaganda with pro-RCV arguments. Time to turn the tide.

Edit: fixed formatting

Edit 2: Added in the map so you don’t have to click the link:

See the pattern? 🤔

  • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    🇦🇺 heh, amateurs… But seriously this is ridiculous, and straight up anti-democtatic. Single member first past the post is the worst voting system out there.

    Inb4 they make mulit-member electorates winner-take-all (all seats to the party who got the plurality of votes).

    This is THE fight USA. In my opinion, your ridiculous voting systems is probably why it’s so easy to suppress you.

  • morgan423@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    First past the post voting is the sole issue that is keeping legitimately contending third parties off of our ballots.

    Installing ranked choice voting (or one of its very close cousins) is the the number one reformation change that can be made to give the people their voices back. So of course, the powers that be are terrified of it… no surprises here.

  • TheDoozer@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    There was a STRONG effort to ban (or at least end) RCV here in Alaska, and it failed, but barely. They even did the super misleading wording, too, in order to make it unclear if the measure banned RCV or supported it.

    I was always so confused by the adamant support that was being shown by general people, though. Like, I get why both Dems and Republicans would be against it: they want to be the only two players in the game. But why any general people would want less choice is beyond me. And it’s funny, because the staunchest proponents (at least where I am) were conservatives, when (again, where I live) RCV basically drove out the Democrats. There were Progressives, there were “centrists,” there were Libertarians, and then there was Republican/MAGA. Dems didn’t even get enough support to be on the ballot. So their hated Libs were wiped off the board entirely for being so ill-liked, but they want to get rid of that system? I just don’t get it.

      • TheDoozer@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I feel like it can kind of be confusing to understand how the process works for it.

        But it is not even remotely confusing as to what you do. Choose, from most to least, who you want. It’s that simple. You want to get into how those votes are tallied, do a little dive, there’s plenty of videos very simply explaining it. If you don’t, and just want to be able to go vote? Just go vote. If even ranking them is too complicated because you have a worm in your brain, just choose one and ignore everything else.

        It might be complicated to tally, but it is not complicated to do. It’s just people being duped by the Big 2 parties to not want choices.

    • nico198x@europe.pub
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      2 days ago

      well, to be fair, shitty electoral systems should be banned, like FPTP, because they aren’t representative. what’s happening here is sadly the opposite.

      • iglou@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        It still shouldn’t be banned, it should be up for debate when picking a system. Explicitly banning a system is pretty much anti-democratic by nature.

        • nico198x@europe.pub
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          No it is not. Agreeing on that it should be banned is a democratic choice. It is an anti-democratic system not fit for purpose in 2025. our understanding of electoral science and maths is much more advanced now. FPTP should NEVER be on the table.

      • Saleh@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        FPTP is fine in many small scale applications. How should a town of 5,000 people elect their mayor otherwise?

        • FlyingCircus@lemmy.world
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          Ranked choice is still better though… scale doesn’t really matter here, the point is to let people vote for who they want, not for who they think might win.

          • Saleh@feddit.org
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            On that level you often only have two, one or sometimes no candidate.

            There is no need to enforce a more complicated system that needs to be explained to everyone, risks more people accidentally voting different than they wanted or invalidating their vote by misunderstanding the rules.

            I have helped with elections in Germany where the parliament has two votes. One for the local candidate FPTP and one for a party, where the parties proportional rates are then assembled in the parliament. I had to explain people the votes and what they do all the time. Because the two votes are on one paper it is a mess to count, as you can’t just stack them easily because of the possible combinations.

            When it gets to state and national levels having proportional systems for parliaments and ranked choice for single candidates i am all for it. But there is no point in pushing for a more complicated system for smaller elections.

            • Bravo@eviltoast.org
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              or sometimes no candidate

              How does FPTP help in that scenario?

              risks more people accidentally voting different than they wanted

              Can you describe how that might happen?

            • FlyingCircus@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Yeah that makes sense. I guess once people get used to ranked voting in large elections, then you could have it in small elections too. Thanks for the reply.

  • MetalMachine@feddit.nl
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    3 days ago

    This is democrats and Republicans not wanting people to vote for their candidate of choice because they have to constantly play the game of the lesser of two evils. They wanna keep power

  • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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    4 days ago

    Tl;dr

    I was curious so I had to go look and see what states banned it. I was shocked, shocked I tell you to see the states that banned it are:

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, West Virginia, Wyoming
    

    Edit to add:

    • Chozo@fedia.io
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      As a Texan, it’s a relief to finally not be included on one of these lists for once.

    • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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      For those non-USians reading this, the pattern is: states which tend to vote Republican and thus have majority Republican governance. So called “red states”.

    • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      You’d think it would be democrats worried about another Bernie Sanders coming along.

      What is it the republicans are worried about with RCV?

      • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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        I don’t know because they shouldn’t be.

        Republicans like Senator Tom Cotton and Donald Trump have garnered headlines for stating their opposition to ranked choice voting after election results didn’t turn out exactly as they hoped. Their preferred candidates, Sarah Palin in the House and Kelly Tshibaka in the Senate, didn’t win. Both are Republicans. So, they claim (loudly) that RCV is biased against Republicans or “rigged.”

      • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        The magas only gained their stranglehold on the party, despite being a minority, due to the neocons splitting their primary ballots.

        • ZephyrXero@lemmy.world
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          They gained their stranglehold from 20+ years of systematic takeover. The Tea Party became MAGA. It didn’t happen over night

    • Quibblekrust@thelemmy.club
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      3 days ago

      Why did you add like a hundred spaces in front of the list of states? That makes it a code block that requires tons of horizontal scrolling to read. I didn’t even recognize it as such at first.

      You know Lemmy has spoiler syntax, right? If that’s what you were going for?

  • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    We voted for it at the county level here in CA. That was back in 2020. San Diego county voted to use RCV, as did several other counties in CA. The county registrar of voters is refusing to change from FPTP, and is waiting to see how the lawsuits turn out.

    Even if your state hasn’t banned it, they will fight you tooth and nail not to change it.

    • throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      Pre-empts local laws preventing sub-divisions of the State (Cities, Towns) from enacting their own election system that would use “ranking” as a method of determining candidates winning or losing.

      Renaming the system will not bypass the ban.

    • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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      For the U.S., the decisive blow came with the Citizens United ruling, although it’s not unreasonable to suggest the refusal to punish Nixon during watergate signaled that the rule of law was merely a suggestion. That kicked off a whole cascade of political and legal maneuvering to get both the legislative and societal landscape into such a contortion that it would willingly hand away the entire nation to vulture-capitalists.

    • undergroundoverground@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      A better question would be “when was there ever been a true democracy?”

      For me, there hasn’t been. That doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t try. It means that we need to truly internalise that wealth and power will, if left unchecked, succeed in perverting it entirely. We need to be ever augmenting it, with that in mind, with a view to playing whack a mole with the interests of the 1% and keeping it working for the 99%.

      I mean that won’t work either. The rich and powerful will never allow us to simply vote away their ill beggoten wealth and power. However, at least people could say that they tried.

      • throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.worksOP
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        3 days ago

        I don’t think we’ll ever have a “true” democracy.

        Its like the concept of “utopia”, you can get closer and closer, but never actually reach it

        Like an asymptote in mathematics.

      • Randelung@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        People keep commenting this without context and it’s driving me mad. It’s factually wrong, so at least tell us what you mean in the figurative sense.

          • Randelung@lemmy.world
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            No, this is just the first time anyone actually invested more than the one sentence into an explanation. Can you give me a little more to look into? I genuinely have no idea what you’re referring to.

            • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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              African Americans were supposed to be given the right to vote after abolition.

              There was a brief period of time during Reconstruction where that happened. However, many states came up with complicated contrivances to make it impossible to vote - poll taxes, “literacy tests,” etc. Effectively, it was a right solely on paper until LBJ in the 60s. Conservatives throwing a massive fit about this is why we have the insane fascistic Right we do right now - they were pro public education until Black kids got to go to the same kids as white kids.

              Women weren’t guaranteed the right to vote until 1920. Conservatives today are trying to revoke the 19th amendment and undo that.

              • Randelung@lemmy.world
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                3 days ago

                Yes, there’s tons of things that make the process unfair, but does that make the system not be a democracy? It’s a flawed one, one that basically only allows white dudes to vote, but the system is still a democracy.

                • stelelor@lemmy.ca
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                  What if only people who make over $500k annually can vote? Is that still a democracy?

                • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  • Blocked the right to vote for one sex
                  • Blocked the right to vote for non-whites
                  • Polls taxes blocked the right to vote for non-whites and the poor
                  • Excluded Natives from voting
                  • The first vote for the president had less than 1% of Americans vote, Washington running unopposed for his terms
                  • Voter ID laws are a tax on the poor
                  • Gerrymandering where the politicians choose the voters.
                  • Electoral college
                  • No time off for voting, meaning the working poor aren’t likely to vote
                  • Voting by mail blocked by most states, the ones that the EC weighs unequally
                  • Parties have sued to keep people and other parties off ballots
                  • Parties have argued before court to not legally require fair primaries, as there’s no legal basis for it

                  Yeah, democracy.

      • throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.worksOP
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        3 days ago

        Sadly, some states, people voted against ranked-choice-voting in referendum. Seems lile people just hear a complex idea and want to shut it down because it challenged their simplistic worldview.

    • throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      4 days ago

      Not sure. Ancient societies also used FPTP and they are still considered by some Scholars/Historians as “democracy” 🤷‍♂️

      • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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        Personally, I think government systems are actually a type of technology. Unfortunately, they aren’t the kind of research where you can easily experiment and iterate upon, since people tend to die in massive numbers if the experiment fails.

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    Is anybody surprised that you could replace the orange with red and have a pretty accurate election map?

    What are you guys scared of? Democracy?

    • GuyFawkes@midwest.social
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      In Kansas it surprises me that Kelly signed it; I’d be more inclined to believe that the Republican supermajorities pushed it past a veto.

  • w3dd1e@lemm.ee
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    In MO. Voted on it last year. The ballot was intentionally worded to be misleading.

    It said each person can only cast one vote. Making it sound like it was to prevent people from voting twice even though that person as already not allowed.

    So dumb.

    • BakerBagel@midwest.social
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      They just pulled that in the Ohio House this week. They have been calling it “One Person, One Vote” and are going to withhold state funds to any municipality that uses ranked choice voting. It passed our house 22-5 iirc

    • gaja@lemm.ee
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      Missouri Amendment 7, Require Citizenship to Vote and Prohibit Ranked-Choice Voting Amendmen