The Independent Center

The Independent Center Helping to promote Access, Fairness and Democracy in government in America We are focused on creating major reforms in the following areas:

1.

Electoral reform, particularly implementing Ranked Choice Voting and changing the Electoral College to elect the President by popular vote
2. Openness and sunshine on budgets and the political process. Easier and better public access to government data on the web in user-friendly formats.
3. Rational and fair redistricting and more competitive races
4. Fairness and equal treatment for all candidates in elections.
5. Campaign finance reform to stop hidden special interest money.

Alaska's motto is "North to the future" and after the recent Alaska supreme court ruling, the future of the north is ran...
01/24/2022

Alaska's motto is "North to the future" and after the recent Alaska supreme court ruling, the future of the north is ranked choice voting.

The ruling comes one day after the justices heard arguments in the case.

Now it's time for the Virginian Democrats to walk the talk... outside of the courtroom.
01/06/2020

Now it's time for the Virginian Democrats to walk the talk... outside of the courtroom.

It was easy for them to pose as pure-hearted reformers when it was the Republicans who controlled Richmond.

Kudos to the Supreme Court - Gerrymandering hurts democracy regardless of whether it helps make a state red or blue.
06/17/2019

Kudos to the Supreme Court - Gerrymandering hurts democracy regardless of whether it helps make a state red or blue.

The Supreme Court has ruled against the Virginia House of Delegates in a racial gerrymandering case that represents a victory for Democrats in the state.

The Economist joins our choir and sings the praise of ranked choice/instant-runoff voting.
06/18/2018

The Economist joins our choir and sings the praise of ranked choice/instant-runoff voting.

A simple reform might fix America’s dysfunctional politics

One by one... more and more people are discussing and advocating ranked choice/instant-runoff voting.
06/01/2018

One by one... more and more people are discussing and advocating ranked choice/instant-runoff voting.

Ease negative partisanship with a different way to elect our government.

Maine's on top of both the country.... and better elections!
04/09/2018

Maine's on top of both the country.... and better elections!

A judge granted a temporary restraining order Tuesday that directs Maine to implement America’s first statewide ranked-choice voting system in June primaries.

Making electoral districts fairer will undoubtedly reduce the R majority, but it's still the best thing for the country.
02/06/2018

Making electoral districts fairer will undoubtedly reduce the R majority, but it's still the best thing for the country.

The Supreme Court, which has been busy with federal cases claiming that voting districts were warped by politics, let stand one from a state court.

Article in "Wired" about wasted votes - and the efficiency gap.  Nothing new here really, but if you haven't skimmed ove...
01/03/2018

Article in "Wired" about wasted votes - and the efficiency gap. Nothing new here really, but if you haven't skimmed over this theory, then it's worth a quick read.

Simple math can help scheming politicians manipulate district maps and cruise to victory. But it can also help identify and fix the problem.

A simple way to quantify how gerrymandered a state is...the % of wasted votes.
10/19/2017

A simple way to quantify how gerrymandered a state is...
the % of wasted votes.

Simple math can help scheming politicians manipulate district maps and cruise to victory. But it can also help identify and fix the problem.

We'll keep beating the drum....
03/20/2017

We'll keep beating the drum....

The United States is a divided nation: There is Redland, where Donald Trump won among exurban non-college educated whites, and Blueland, home to diverse city and coastal cosmopolitans, where Hillary

3RD PARTIES NOW CAN BAT IN THE PINE STATEAs Kenneth Arrow proved in his "Impossibility Theorem" it's actually impossible...
11/10/2016

3RD PARTIES NOW CAN BAT IN THE PINE STATE

As Kenneth Arrow proved in his "Impossibility Theorem" it's actually impossible to have a 100% fair voting system. However, there are many systems that are far more representative than the one we have now. A system that better ensures the most preferred candidate is the one who wins. And one that allows 3rd parties a fighting chance while not giving fringe parties or candidates a voice disproportionate with their actual support.

Maine just passed ranked choice voting, a method that (among other things) means people can vote for their candidate of choice without worrying they are "throwing away" their vote. Or that they are hurting their second choice candidate and helping to elect their least favorite.

Most elementary school children quickly figure out that the electoral college is unrepresentative and distorts the vote - a methodology made worse by states who *choose* to cast their electoral votes 'winner-take-all.' One improvement to improve fairness would be for states to apportion their electoral votes proportionally - similar to how Maine and Nebraska do now. But that's unlikely. Battleground states relish the attention to their issues (and the money) the winner-take-all model brings. Safe states, by definition, lean to one party, so they don't want to dilute their votes for their party.

Advocates for a National Popular vote or those who recommend a modification to electoral college voting wherein states promise to cast all their electoral votes for the winner of the popular vote choose this method because it *seems* fairer. It can be. But the way most elections are currently run, it can also create giant-sized distortions resulting winners that do not remotely represent the preference of the people.

The easy fix, and fairest of systems, is a Popular Vote that that incorporates Preferential Voting, also known as "Ranked Choice Voting" or "Instant Runoff Voting." On November 8, Maine became the first state to implement it. Ranked choice is going to make elections more representative in Maine - and would certainly improve primaries and general elections nationwide.

Ranked choice/Instant Runoff voting encourages voters to rank the candidates in order, based on the voter's preferences. After all 1st place votes for all candidates are tallied, the candidate with the least first place votes is removed and their votes are reallocated - with their voters' 2nd choice votes now being re-cast as their first choice. It's the same as if every voter went back to the polls and recast their ballots without that candidate in the mix.

If there are more than 3 candidates, this process is repeated there are two candidates left - and then one candidate emerges with a majority.

Ranked choice also permits voters to vote for 3rd parties without worrying about 'wasting' their vote or hurting their 2nd choice candidate.

Consider how most states currently run their elections - in a hypothetical election for 'dessert' where 60% prefer chocolate and 40% prefer butterscotch. Candidates A and B are chocolate. Candidate C is butterscotch. Candidate A & B split the chocolate vote. Candidate C wins with 40% of the vote - even though 60% of voters would have preferred EITHER of the chocolates to butterscotch.

That model is how Maine (and most states) ran its elections before passing ranked choice. Indeed, Maine has not had a first-term governor with majority support since 1966.

In a ranked choice election for dessert, if candidate A got 27%, candidate B got 33% and candidate C got 40%, candidate A would lose round one and have its votes re-allocated. Since candidate A's voters still prefer 'any kind of chocolate' to butterscotch, they would have marked candidate B as their 2nd choice - which now becomes their first choice. When the votes are retabulated, candidate B has 60% and candidate C has 40% - just as it would be if people had physically gone back to the polls and voted again.
In years past it would have been hard to implement 'instant runoff' voting, as the task of tallying and reallocating votes would have been too onerous. But now, a laptop could handle the task.

Despite that, to this day, many countries waste time and money on physical runoffs if no candidate polls a majority. Frequently, the top two vote-getters from *all* the candidates square off in a run-off. That's both antiquated AND unrepresentative.

Consider an election for dessert where 70% of the population really wants pie. The candidates are Apple Pie, Apple-Cherry Pie, Cherry Pie, Pumpkin Pie, Pecan Pie, carrots, and sugar cubes . Each pie gets 14% of the vote - Carrots and sugar cubes, the fringe candidates, receive 15%. Carrots and sugar cubes run off for winner even though up to 85% of the population will be unhappy with the victor.

Yes, we're a republic. That doesn't mean we don't deserve national, state and/or local elections that represent the actual preferences of the voters.

Ranked choice voting is logical, fair and easily implementable. Push for it in your state. Unless your state is Maine. Then have a lobster roll and congratulate your state for its wisdom.

Ranked choice voting on the ballot in Maine.One of the great features of ranked choice voting is it gives 3rd party cand...
10/31/2016

Ranked choice voting on the ballot in Maine.
One of the great features of ranked choice voting is it gives 3rd party candidates a fighting chance.

Question 5 on this year’s ballot proposes a dramatic overhaul of Maine’s election system called ranked-choice voting, and recent polls suggest Mainers are

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