Though San Francisco has used ranked-choice voting for local elections for 20 years, this method of picking more than one candidate when marking your ballot can be confusing for first-time voters.
Ranked choice voting is used in San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, and San Leandro Like traditional elections, ranked choice voting requires a majority (50%+1) to win Ballot tip: Only fill in one name ...
Ranked-choice voting has formed some unusual alliances between candidates. New Yorkers voting in the city's closely-watched Democratic mayoral primary election on June 24 will be able to rank their ...
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