The other winner in New York’s mayoral contest: ranked-choice voting | David Daley
Voters want more choice at the polls and more issue-driven campaigns. In the Democratic primary, they got both
The polls did not look good for New York progressives this winter when the Working Families party began making its endorsements for city elections. An early February poll from Emerson College showed Andrew Cuomo with a 23-point lead in a hypothetical Democratic primary matchup. None of the four leading progressives even approached double-digit support – including the then unknown assemblyman Zohran Mamdani. He polled at 1%.
In the days before ranked-choice voting, the Working Families party’s endorsement process might have looked quite different. Like-minded candidates would have drawn sharp distinctions between each other. Party officials might have looked to nudge candidates toward the exits, behind closed doors. Before any votes had been cast in the primary, the party would consolidate behind just one choice. It would have been bloody and left a bitter taste for everyone.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Kyle Stevens/Shutterstock
© Photograph: Kyle Stevens/Shutterstock