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ID Proposition 1 - Top-Four Ranked-Choice Voting
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Parents |
> United States > Idaho > ID Referenda > 2024 Referenda > Proposition 1 - Top-Four Ranked-Choice Voting
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Office | Referendum |
Honorific | Referendum - Abbr: |
Type | Referendum |
Filing Deadline | January 01, 2024 - 12:00am Central |
Polls Open | November 05, 2024 - 09:00am Central |
Polls Close | November 05, 2024 - 09:00pm Central |
Term Start | November 06, 2024 - 12:00pm |
Term End | January 01, 3999 - 12:00pm |
Turnout |
85.21% Registered
48.32% Total Population
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Contributor | Mr. Matt |
Last Modified | Mr. Matt November 14, 2024 08:00pm |
Data Sources | [Link] |
Description |
[Link]
Measure to (1) replace voter selection of party nominees with a top-four primary; (2) require a ranked-choice voting system for general elections.
This measure proposes two distinct changes to elections for most public offices.
First, this measure would abolish Idaho’s party primaries. Under current law, political parties nominate candidates through primary elections in which party members vote for a candidate to represent the party in the general election. The initiative creates a system where all candidates participate in a top-four primary and voters may vote on all candidates. The top four vote-earners for each office would advance to the general election. Candidates could list any affiliation on the ballot, but would not represent political parties, and need not be associated with the party they name.
Second, the measure would require a ranked-choice voting system for the general election. Under current law, voters may select one candidate for each office, and the candidate with the most votes wins. Under the ranked-choice voting system, voters rank candidates on the ballot in order of preference, but need not rank every candidate. The votes are counted in successive rounds, and the candidate receiving the fewest votes in each round is eliminated. A vote for an eliminated candidate will transfer to the voter’s next-highest-ranked active candidate. The candidate wi [More...]
[Link]
Measure to (1) replace voter selection of party nominees with a top-four primary; (2) require a ranked-choice voting system for general elections.
This measure proposes two distinct changes to elections for most public offices.
First, this measure would abolish Idaho’s party primaries. Under current law, political parties nominate candidates through primary elections in which party members vote for a candidate to represent the party in the general election. The initiative creates a system where all candidates participate in a top-four primary and voters may vote on all candidates. The top four vote-earners for each office would advance to the general election. Candidates could list any affiliation on the ballot, but would not represent political parties, and need not be associated with the party they name.
Second, the measure would require a ranked-choice voting system for the general election. Under current law, voters may select one candidate for each office, and the candidate with the most votes wins. Under the ranked-choice voting system, voters rank candidates on the ballot in order of preference, but need not rank every candidate. The votes are counted in successive rounds, and the candidate receiving the fewest votes in each round is eliminated. A vote for an eliminated candidate will transfer to the voter’s next-highest-ranked active candidate. The candidate with the most votes in the final round wins. [Less...]
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