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    Home » Blog » AZ Supreme Court Approves Ballot Measure Language Informing Voters It Could Lead To Ranked-Choice Voting

    AZ Supreme Court Approves Ballot Measure Language Informing Voters It Could Lead To Ranked-Choice Voting

    August 30, 2024Updated:August 30, 2024 Editors Picks No Comments
    Arizona Supreme Court Phoenix Arizona panoramio x jpg
    Arizona Supreme Court Phoenix Arizona panoramio x jpg
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    The Arizona Supreme Court overturned a poll initiative’s try to rewrite the measure prior to the 2024 election on Wednesday that was being attempted by supporters. The implementation of ranked-choice election (RCV ) in Arizona may occur following the approval of the proposal in November.

    The legislative board responsible for writing ballot action reports “accurately describes the Initiative” and” greatly complies” with state law, according to the highest court in Arizona. A judge from Maricopa County Superior Court, who claimed the language used by the Parliamentary Council “was consciously misleading,” is overturned in the decision.

    Proposition 140 would alter the Arizona Constitution if it were passed by voters by establishing an open primary system that allows applicants from all political parties to contest the same principal. The state government would be in charge of determining how some individuals may advance to the general election, which may determine the winner of races with three or more individuals using ranked-choice election. The secretary of state would have the final say in the legislature’s decision regarding the number of applicants who may run in general elections on November 1, 2025.

    Under an RCV system, voters are asked to rate individuals of all parties in order of taste. If no candidate receives more than 50 percent of first-choice seats in the first round of voting, the last-place winner is eliminated, and his votes are reallocated to the politician’s second-choice member. This procedure continues until a single candidate receives the majority of the seats.

    RCV is favored most by Democrats as a method of flipping typically Republican-held seats, which has resulted in inaccurate election results and higher rates of discarded ballots.

    A “yes” voting on Prop 140 may result in RCV being used in standard elections, according to the Legislative Council’s description. This prompted Make Elections Fair Arizona, the party behind Prop 140, to file a petition challenging the speech, in which its people claimed the Council’s conclusion, as the Arizona Mirror described, “unfairly focuses on the chance for ranked-choice election, which is not mandated by the proposed constitutional amendment”.

    The Legislative Council’s outline of the program was misrepresented by the lower court, and the Arizona Supreme Court decided that the committee’s description was in line with state law.

    ” We unanimously conclude that the Council’s analysis substantially complies]with the law ]” ,&nbsp, Chief Justice Ann Scott Timmer reportedly wrote. The Council’s examination of the first numbered paragraph,”… explains this provision perfectly by saying that the Initiative may amend the constitution to” [a]llow for the use of voting position at all elections held in this position to determine which applicant received the most votes.”

    The Grand Canyon State’s highest courtroom also granted a unique challenge to Prop 140’s motion to proceed, and the ruling on Wednesday came a week after that court’s ruling. The parties who are challenging the signatures made by Make Elections Fair Arizona to Secretary of State Adrian Fontes “have argued that there are 40, 000 duplicative signatures in the sample, which, if discarded, would take the action under the maximum amount required for placement on the ballot,” according to AZ Free News.

    The state started printing ballots on August 23; the state’s Supreme Court argued that if it is ultimately determined there are enough invalid signatures to prevent the initiative from appearing on the November ballot, it” should issue an injunction precluding any votes for the measure from being counted.”

    Since then, Make Elections Fair has requested that the high court reconsider its decision, even if it turns out that the measure lacks the number of valid signatures required.


    Shawn Fleetwood is a University of Mary Washington graduate and a staff writer for The Federalist. He previously served as a state content writer for Convention of States Action and his work has been featured in numerous outlets, including RealClearPolitics, RealClear Health, and Conservative Review. Follow him on Twitter @ShawnFleetwood

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