After the election results for Alaska's ranked choice voting election to fill the remainder of US Rep Don Young, Sarah Palin blamed her loss to Mary Peltola on Ranked Choice Voting.
“Ranked-choice voting was sold as the way to make elections better reflect the will of the people. As Alaska – and America – now sees, the exact opposite is true. The people of Alaska do not want the destructive democrat agenda to rule our land and our lives, but that’s what resulted from someone’s experiment with this new crazy, convoluted, confusing ranked-choice voting system. It’s effectively disenfranchised 60% of Alaska voters." [From her campaign website.]
The quick answer to the title question is "No".
Below (way below) is a video discussing this question. I don't know who these people are - it looks like it's a podcast from The Hill. (Biasly rates The Hill "moderate" with an ever so slight lean to the right.) But they do more or less reflect my sense of Ranked Choice Voting.
What they don't discuss is how getting rid of the closed Republican primary - having an open primary with all candidates and picking the top four to be in the final Ranked Choice general election.
A closed Republican primary would have probably led to a Palin victory and two major candidates - one Republican and one Democrat (Palin and Peltola) running in the general election, with some minor third party candidates.
Would Peltola have been able to defeat Palin in that sort of general election? We won't know. But we do know that half of Begich's second votes went to either Peltola or no one. Here's what it looked like on the Alaska Elections website:
click on images to enlarge |
So it could well be that Peltola may have pulled out the victory under the old system. Lots of Alaska remember how Palin quit being governor after only finishing part of the term. Many also remember the issues with the Palin's oldest son over slashing school bus tires and opening his senior year in Michigan, and the giant brawl involving the Palin family and a Wasilla party.
And long time Alaska Republicans remember how she publicly called out the GOP Party Chair for having a conflict of interest as a member of the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission while, as GOP chair, soliciting donations from the oil companies the commission regulated.
The benefit of Ranked Choice Voting, as they say in the video, is that you can vote for candidates that aren't likely to win without throwing away your vote, because you pick the one you like the most and then the next one, and if you like, the ones after that. If you first choice loses, your second choice candidate (gets your vote instead.)
The Republicans - Begich and Palin - fought with each other in this campaign. Ranked Choice Voting with an open primary means you can't alienate too many voters and it, theoretically, eliminates the extreme candidates who would win in a closed primary.
There's also an interesting NYTimes article on this for those who can get past the paywall. It looks at how Alaska got ranked choice voting and highlights Katherine Gehl who has devoted herself to the idea. It mentions that an initiative in Missouri didn't get enough votes, but one in Nevada this year did. Also interesting the Marc Elias who has been fighting hard with lawsuits against GOP attempts to deny that Biden won the election, worked hard against the Ranked Choice Initiative in Nevada. Elias is a smart guy so I need to understand his opposition better.
Also, a reminder for non-Alaskans, August 16 was also the primary election for the actual (not just the remaining months of Young's seat) Alaska House race. Here's a list of the candidates, their vote tallies, and red marks the four top candidate who go on to the general election in November.
Tara Sweeney is both a Republican AND an Alaska Native Woman. She is more aligned with oil interests. I suspect that Alaska Natives will give Peltola their second vote if they vote first for Sweeney. Will the Republicans come up with a more cooperative strategy and direct their voters to cast their next votes for the other Republicans? Will it matter?
Peltola has now gotten much more name recognition and more people have seen her. She's so much more humble than the two candidates she beat in the Special Election, and unlike Palin, she speaks in whole sentences and in a calm tone. Unless someone gets 50% + one vote on the first ballot, we won't know for two weeks, when all the ballots are in. But if someone gets 48% in the first round and the others are much further back, that should be a good indicator too.
Well put, Steve (referencing Peltola): "...and unlike Palin, she speaks in whole sentences and in a calm tone."
ReplyDeleteTo think, that this has now become exceptional in a candidate.