Unified primary explained

A unified primary (or top-2 approval+runoff) is an electoral system for narrowing the field of candidates for a single-winner election, similar to a nonpartisan blanket primary, but using approval voting for the first round, advancing the top-two candidates, allowing voters to confirm the majority-supported candidate in the general election.[1] [2] [3]

Comparison to other primary systems

In the US, most primary elections are party-specific: voters select a political party, either as part of the voter registration process or at the ballot box, and may vote only for candidates sharing that same party affiliation. These primary systems use plurality voting, where each voter may express a preference for one candidate per office. The candidate in each party receiving the most votes advances to the general election. Voters not affiliated with a major political party may or may not be able to participate in these primary elections, depending on jurisdictional rules, and candidates not affiliated with a major political party may be nominated to the general election by other processes such as minor party conventions or petition.

The non-partisan blanket primary (aka "jungle primary" or top-two primary) is a single primary election in which all voters may participate, and all candidates appear on the same ballot, regardless of party affiliation or lack of party affiliation. The top two most-voted candidates (even if members of the same party) will appear in the general election. This is intended to allow non-partisan voters and candidates to participate, and to allow more moderate nominees in the general election (since voters from both sides of the spectrum can vote for them). However, the non-partisan blanket primary still only allows voters a single choice per office, and is therefore prone to the spoiler effect,[4] where candidates espousing similar ideologies split votes, helping candidates with opposing ideologies (but fewer candidates) to win.

Like a blanket primary, the unified primary has only one primary election, in which all voters participate, and all candidates appear on a single ballot regardless of political party affiliation. Unlike a blanket primary, the unified primary uses approval voting in the first round, in which voters may express support for any number of favored candidates, which is intended to eliminate vote splitting and spoilers (since voters can support a partisan favorite and a moderate).[5] The top two most-approved candidates will appear in the general election.

Analysis

Proponents argue[6] that the Unified Primary system will increase voter choice by allowing all voters to participate equally in all stages of the election process, by allowing voters to express support for more than a single candidate, and by allowing all candidates to compete in a uniform election process, regardless of political party affiliation or lack of affiliation.[7]

In contrast, FairVote, a national election reform non-profit that advocates instant-runoff voting, theorized[8] that it is likely that general election races would have two finalists from the same major party in districts where a majority of voters affiliate with that party, and thereby reduce voter choice in the election that has statistically higher turnout than current primary elections.

Unlike single-round Approval voting, the Approval+Runoff method fails independence of clones, because any time the second-most approved candidate wins the runoff, if a clone of the most-approved candidate is introduced, then the runoff will be only between the most-approved candidate and their clone, preventing the second-most approved candidate and any of their clones from winning.[9]

Usage

St. Louis

The STL Approves campaign sought to adopt the same system (though they refer to it simply as "approval voting") in St. Louis city elections (Mayor, Comptroller, President of the Board of Aldermen, and Alderman).[10] [11] [12] [13]

Originally called St. Louisans for Ranked Choice Voting,[14] the campaign switched to advocating for approval+runoff, primarily due to learning that St. Louis and St. Louis County voting machines are incompatible with IRV.[15] [16] [17] [18] [19]

In April 2020 they gathered enough signatures to qualify for the ballot, Proposition D.[20] [21] Polling showed more than 70% support for the measure, with majority support among all demographic groups and parties.[22] [23] On election day, the initiative was successfully passed with 68% of the vote, thus becoming the first United States city and jurisdiction to adopt it.[24] [25]

2021 election

The first top-two approval primary was held on March 2, 2021, with a 44,571 (22.14%) primary voter turnout. The April 6, 2021 runoff turnout was 57,918 (28.8%).[26] The 2021 St. Louis mayoral election had 4 candidates, three Democrats and one Republican. The average voter supported 1.56 candidates, with the top candidate gaining 57.0%, runner up 46.3%.[27]

March 2, 2021Primary Election Results[28]
Tishaura JonesCara SpencerLewis E. ReedAndrew Jones
Party preference:Democratic PartyDemocratic PartyDemocratic PartyRepublican Party
Votes of approval: 25,38820,65917,1866,428
Approval percentage:56.96%46.35%38.56%14.42%
Total Vote Cards Cast: 44,571

In the old closed primary system, there would have been a Democratic party primary with 3 candidates, and a Republican party primary with 1 candidate, with the top Democrat and top Republican advancing to the general election. With Saint Louis being a Democrat-majority city, the top-two approval primary helps two Democrats rise and compete head-to-head in the runoff, as well as allowing Republican voters a say on which Democrat wins. Democrat candidates have some incentive to present themselves as a moderate to gain Republican votes. Without a party primary Republicans lose access to consolidate under a single candidates, so they must agree on a single candidate before the primary to have any chance of making the top-two.

2022 repeal attempt

While voter support for the approval voting ballot measure was high, a majority of the city's aldermen opposed it, and in January 2022, they attempted to repeal it and return to partisan primaries with two or three rounds of runoff voting.[29] [30] [31] Repealing a voter initiative requires a two-thirds majority of aldermen support, however, and the bills were not passed before another voter initiative, Proposition R, was passed with 69% support, which required that further changes to the voting system be put to a public vote.[32]

2024 repeal attempt

In February 2024, Ben Baker introduced legislation to ban approval and ranked-choice voting state-wide.[33] [34] It passed in the House on Apr 15, 2024.[35]

Reform campaigns

Oregon

The use of approval voting on an open field of all candidates for partisan office as a replacement for current party-nominated primary systems was first publicly proposed in November 2011[36] by Mark and Jon Frohnmayer in the form of a draft ballot initiative. The text of the failed Oregon Ballot Measure 65 (2008), which would have instituted a top-two primary system, served as the foundation for the draft, which was then modified to allow voters to select as many candidates as favored for each office.[37]

A formal petition drive to institute the Unified Primary system in Oregon began in October 2013.[38] Petitioners completed the sponsorship phase of the initiative process by collecting more than 1,000 verified signatures from registered voters to advance the measure toward the November, 2014 ballot.[39] The pairing "unified primary" was also advanced by Oregon's Attorney General in the draft ballot title for this initiative: "Changes Election Nomination Processes; Replaces Current Primary System With Unified Primary For All Candidates."[40] Several variations of this measure have been filed to date: 2014 Initiative Petitions 38 and 51.[41]

The campaign did not collect the 87,213 signatures required to get Petition 54 onto the ballot.[42] (The "Open Primary" proposal that used plurality voting did collect enough signatures, but was defeated.[43])

Seattle

A 2022 ballot initiative sought to bring this system to Seattle (under the name "approval voting"). In June, volunteers for Seattle Approves had gathered the 26,000 signatures for Initiative 134 to qualify for the November ballot.[44] The initiative would be an open primary with approval voting, followed by a top-two runoff.[45] [46]

The city council then had the option to adopt the initiative immediately as an ordinance, put it on the ballot for voters to approve, or reject it and substitute it with a similar measure.[47] They chose the latter, with Andrew Lewis announcing a bill to put a two-round variant of instant-runoff voting on the ballot to compete against the initiative (under the name "ranked choice voting"), with support from FairVote. Because Seattle law requires a top-two runoff, this system is actually an instant-runoff primary followed by a top-two runoff.

In the end, the ballot contained two questions, the first of which asked voters if they wanted to change the voting system at all, and the second of which asked voters to support either Approval (1A) or Ranked Choice (1B). Question 1 narrowly passed, with 51% support, while the more well-known RCV was favored in Question 2, with 76% support.

References

  1. News: The Unified Primary: A New Way to Conduct Nonpartisan Elections. Griffiths. Shawn M.. 2014-01-03. Independent Voter Network. 2018-06-23. en-US. https://web.archive.org/web/20140104212654/https://ivn.us/2014/01/03/unified-primary-new-way-conduct-nonpartisan-elections/. 2014-01-04.
  2. News: Different Types of Primary Elections. Sharnak. Debbie. Independent Voter Project. 2018-06-23.
  3. Web site: Unified Primary Initiative Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) . Frohnmayer . Mark . https://web.archive.org/web/20180624010608/https://olis.leg.state.or.us/liz/2014R1/Downloads/CommitteeMeetingDocument/35592 . 24 June 2018 . dead.
  4. Web site: Calitics:: Law of unintended consequences: CA's top-two primary helps cement intra-party control. Atkins. David. 2014-01-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20150317035657/http://www.calitics.com/diary/15356/law-of-unintended-consequences-cas-toptwo-primary-helps-cement-intraparty-control. 2015-03-17. 2018-07-17.
  5. Web site: Compare. Unified Primary. https://web.archive.org/web/20140622004731/http://www.unifiedprimary.org/compare_open_primary. 2014-06-22. 2018-07-17.
  6. Web site: The Equal Vote Campaign. https://web.archive.org/web/20140825054745/http://www.unifiedprimary.org/. 2014-08-25. 2018-07-17.
  7. News: Could approval voting make jungle primaries less objectionable?. 2016-06-03. D Gary Grady. 2018-07-17. en-US.
  8. Web site: Top Two (With a Twist) for Oregon?. 2013-10-18. FairVote.org. 2018-07-17.
  9. Delemazure . Theo . Lang . Jérôme . Laslier . Jean-François . Sanver . M. Remzi . 2022 . Approval with Runoff . Proceedings of the Thirty-First International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence . en . 31 . 1 . 10.24963/ijcai.2022/33 . free. 2203.02343 .
  10. Web site: STL Approves. en-US. 2019-10-02.
  11. Web site: It's not just ranked-choice. Approval voting is also in the offing.. Theobald. Bill. 2019-06-17. The Fulcrum. en. 2019-10-02.
  12. Web site: Joining St. Louis Approves to Advance Approval Voting Campaign. Hamlin. Aaron. 2019-05-28. Democracy Chronicles. en-US. 2019-10-02.
  13. Web site: Nonprofit donates $75,000 to group trying to change St. Louis voting method. Barker. Jacob. stltoday.com. 4 June 2019 . en. 2019-10-02.
  14. Web site: St Louisans for Ranked Choice Voting. en. 2019-10-02.
  15. Web site: St Louisans for Ranked Choice Voting. March 24, 2019. Facebook. en. 2019-10-02. We are excited to announce a shift in strategy as we join forces with Show Me Integrity: Reforming Missouri Politics in bringing Approval Voting to St Louis!.
  16. Web site: Not quite correct on either front! The STL4RCV campaign is now working with http://stlapproves.org. @8aleXD will be speaking:). Ty. 2019-05-14. @tschlic. en. 2019-10-02.
  17. Web site: St. Louisans for Ranked Choice Voting is pivoting to approval voting...but what is that?. Woytus. Amanda. 2019-03-29. www.stlmag.com. en-us. 2019-10-02. Schlichenmeyer ... is part of a movement to implement approval voting ... Originally, Schlichenmeyer and a group called St. Louisans for Ranked Choice Voting were pursuing ranked choice, or instant runoff, voting.
  18. Web site: With the St. Louis mayor and board president chosen by fewer than 40 percent of voters, activists try to change voting rules. Barker. Jacob. stltoday.com. 10 March 2019 . en. 2019-10-02. can the voting machines actually do it? ... In the case of St. Louis and St. Louis County, the answer is no.".
  19. Web site: FAQ. STL Approves. en-US. 2019-10-02. approval voting with a top two runoff is compatible with our current voting machines, while instant-runoff is not..
  20. Web site: Great news: After turning in more than 20,000 signatures, we have QUALIFIED for the ballot in 2020!. 2020-04-01. @STLApproves. en. 2020-04-08.
  21. Web site: New voting method could find breakthrough in St. Louis. 2020-04-01. The Fulcrum. en. 2020-04-08.
  22. Web site: Poll: Strong Support for Approval Voting in St. Louis. 2019-11-07. The Center for Election Science. en-US. 2020-04-08.
  23. Web site: St. Louis Approval Voting Summary. Greenfield. Ben. October 21, 2019. Google Docs. Change Research. 2020-04-08.
  24. Web site: November 4, 2020. St. Louis, Missouri, Proposition D, Approval Voting Initiative (November 2020). November 4, 2020. Ballotpedia.
  25. News: Sclinkmann. Mark. November 4, 2020. Overhaul of St. Louis election system passes, residency rule repeal fails. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. November 4, 2020.
  26. Web site: March 2, 2021 . Election Summary Report - Primary Municipal Election - St. Louis, Missouri .
  27. Web site: Mayoral election in St. Louis, Missouri (2021) .
  28. Web site: FINAL OFFICIAL RESULTS - BY APPROVAL PERCENTAGE . stlouis-mo.gov . Board of Election Commissioners for the City of St. Louis . May 4, 2022.
  29. Web site: Schlinkmann . Mark . Effort underway to repeal 'approval voting' in St. Louis, replace it with new system . 2023-01-02 . STLtoday.com . 14 January 2022 . en.
  30. Web site: Tyus . Sharon . Board Bill Number 159 Session 2021-2022 . 2023-01-02 . stlouis-mo.gov . en . This Board Bill would repeal Ordinance 71410 Proposition D (Open, Non-Partisan Elections) in its entirety..
  31. Web site: Tyus . Sharon . Board Bill Number 160 Session 2021-2022 . 2023-01-02 . stlouis-mo.gov . en . It allows the top two candidates in each of the partisan primary elections … to then compete in a Runoff Municipal Primary Election.
  32. Web site: St. Louis, Missouri, Proposition R, Redistricting Commission, Public Vote to Change Voting Methods, and Conflicts of Interest Requirements Initiative (April 2022) . 2023-01-02 . Ballotpedia . en.
  33. Web site: Nelson . Alisa . 2023-05-04 . Should Missouri ban ranked choice and approval voting? . 2024-01-23 . Missourinet . en-US.
  34. Web site: es_admin . 2024-04-19 . CES Urges Missouri Legislature to Oppose HJR 104, Which Aims to Suppress Voter Voices by Prohibiting Approval Voting and RCV . 2024-04-21 . The Center for Election Science . en-US.
  35. Web site: Bill tracking in Missouri - HJR 104 (2024 legislative session) - FastDemocracy . 2024-04-21 . fastdemocracy.com . en-US.
  36. https://www.facebook.com/UnifiedPrimary/info Fair and Unified Elections Initiative Page Info
  37. Web site: Text of the measure . https://web.archive.org/web/20140219020523/http://www.unifiedprimary.org/oregon/page2.html#measure . 2014-02-19 . 2018-07-17 . Unified Primary Elections Initiative.
  38. News: Mapes . Jeff . 2013-10-10 . Dave Frohnmayer's son proposes radical change in Oregon primary system . en-US . OregonLive.com . 2018-07-17.
  39. News: Mortensen . Camilla . 2013-12-12 . Effort To Change The Primary Voting System . en-US . Eugene Weekly . 2018-07-17.
  40. https://sos.oregon.gov/admin/Documents/irr/2014/038dbt.pdf Oregon IP38 Draft Ballot Initiative Title
  41. http://egov.sos.state.or.us/elec/web_irr_search.search_form Oregon Secretary of State Initiative, Referendum, and Recall Petition Log Database
  42. News: Oregon Unified Primary Elections Initiative (2014) . en-US . Ballotpedia . 2018-07-17.
  43. News: Oregon Open Primary Initiative, Measure 90 (2014) - Ballotpedia . en-US . 2018-07-17.
  44. Web site: June 15, 2022 . Seattle voting reform initiative qualifies for November 2022 ballot . 2023-01-02 . Seattle Approves. https://web.archive.org/web/20220707033437/https://seattleapproves.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/20220615-Seattle-voting-reform-initiative-qualifies-for-November-2022-ballot.pdf . 2022-07-07 .
  45. Web site: Seattle, Washington, Proposition 1A and 1B, Approval Voting Initiative and Ranked-Choice Voting Measure (November 2022) . 2023-01-02 . Ballotpedia . en.
  46. Web site: 2022-12-16 . Seattle Approves - Vote YES on Prop. 1A . https://web.archive.org/web/20221216132520/https://seattleapproves.org/ . 2022-12-16 . 2023-01-02 .
  47. Web site: Krieg . Hannah . Seattle City Council May Put Competing Ranked-Choice Voting Measure on the Ballot . 2023-01-02 . The Stranger . en.