The most common form of ranked-choice voting is instant-runoff voting, according to Ballotpedia. Here’s how an instant-runoff voting system works: Proponents of ranked-choice voting credit the ...
Nate Atkinson and Ezra Friedman have posted this paper on SSRN. Here’s the abstract: Should states retain plurality rule or adopt a different voting method? We study the class of sequential plurality ...
Ranked-choice voting, also known as instant-runoff voting, allows voters to rank multiple candidates in numerical order of preference rather than just choosing one (as they would in the more ...
Also known as “instant run-off voting,” the system is currently in place in Maine and 11 American cities. The system is not nearly as complicated as it may sound; it just means that voters get ...