Politics & Government

Minnetonka Voters Will Decide Whether To Banish Ranked-Choice Voting

RCV was instituted by Minnetonka voters in 2020, but its days there may already be numbered.

When Minnetonka voters head to the polls on Nov. 7, they'll decide whether or not the city should continue using ranked-choice voting (RCV) for municipal elections.
When Minnetonka voters head to the polls on Nov. 7, they'll decide whether or not the city should continue using ranked-choice voting (RCV) for municipal elections. (Jenna Fisher/Patch)

MINNETONKA — When Minnetonka voters head to the polls on Nov. 7, they'll decide whether or not the city should continue using ranked-choice voting (RCV) for municipal elections.

RCV was instituted by Minnetonka voters in 2020, but its days there may already be numbered.

Local critics of RCV— which includes Mayor Brad Wiersum and former mayors Terry Schneider and Karen Anderson — argue that the method is costly to administer and confusing to voters.

Find out what's happening in Minnetonkafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"Regardless of your view of RCV, it is clear that a binary choice between two candidates is a simpler option," writes Wiersum, Schneider, and Anderson in a joint plea to voters.

"Simplicity is important. Simplicity invites inclusion and participation. When voting is more complex, voters may lose interest and may drop out of the voting process before all steps are complete."

Find out what's happening in Minnetonkafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

They also argue that RCV devalues some votes through "exhausted ballots," and creates a "manufactured majority" rather than a simple majority.

Meanwhile, advocates for RCV argue that the method has helped voter turnout increase in the city and has ended the need for costly primaries.

"Prior to the adoption of RCV in 2020, Minnetonka required a city primary in August anytime there were more than two candidates on the ballot, and then held a second general election in November with the top two candidates from the primary," writes FairVoteMN.

"Minnetonka has held ten municipal primaries between 1985 and 2020, and without RCV, would have held two more primaries in 2021 and 2023, at an average cost of $50,000 each. Only a small percentage of the city's voters showed up to vote in those August primaries, typically only five percent, and that small number of Minnetonka voters would decide which candidates advanced to the general election ballot, preventing the larger voter pool in November from weighing in on all the candidates."

Here's exactly how the question will be laid out on the ballot:

CITY QUESTION 1 (Minnetonka)
PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENT: REPEAL OF RANKED CHOICE VOTING FOR MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS
Shall the Minnetonka City Charter be amended to repeal ranked choice voting as the method for electing the mayor and city council and reinstate the use of a primary (if needed) and general election?

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