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Election workers John Jorgensen and Irene Morris inspect ballots on May 16, 2022 at the Marion County Clerk's Office in Salem. In future elections, Oregon might opt for ranked choice voting. (Ron Cooper/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

Election workers John Jorgensen and Irene Morris inspect ballots on May 16, 2022 at the Marion County Clerk’s Office in Salem. Measure 117 asks voters if they’d like ranked choice voting for federal and statewide elections. (Ron Cooper/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

Preliminary results show voters opposing Measure 117, which would adopt a ranked choice voting system for federal and state elections.

According to the Secretary of State’s Office, nearly 58% voters are against Measure 117 compared with 42% in favor.

In ranked choice voting, anyone who gets more than 50% of the votes wins. If no one gets a majority, the person with the least votes is eliminated, and their first-choice votes then go to the second-choice person on that ballot. That continues until there is a winner.

Republicans opposed Measure 117, saying it’s confusing and would make voting too complicated for Oregonians. County clerks also opposed the measure, saying it was poorly written and that the system needs to be “thoroughly” vetted.

“Any ensuing confusion or issues will likely lead to your election officials sitting through legislative hearings trying to amend how this is currently written,” the clerks said in the Voters’ Pamphlet. 

Opponents didn’t raise much money to defeat it – only about $2,500 – while supporters raised more than $4 million to get the measure passed.

Lawmakers referred Measure 117 to the ballot to give voters the option of adopting ranked choice voting for primary and general election races for president, U.S. senator, U.S. representative, governor, secretary of state, attorney general, state treasurer and labor commissioner. The measure also would authorize – but not mandate – local governments to adopt ranked choice voting for their races. 

Lawmakers excluded their races after local election officials expressed concern about lengthy ballots. That exception is likely something that raised suspicions among voters, analysts said.

They also noted that the last time voters opted to change the voting system was in 1998, with the approval of vote by mail. That came after more than a decade of testing at the local level.

Oregon’s one experiment with ranked choice voting – in Benton County – went into effect in 2020. Ranked choice voting is also used in a few U.S. cities and in the states of Alaska and Maine. Portland used ranked choice voting in this election to form its new city government and Multnomah County will begin using it in 2026.

The ballot referral comes at a time of mounting disillusionment with the political system. In a recent Portland-based Values and Beliefs Center survey, 75% of respondents said the most politically popular candidate, not the most qualified, wins, and 58% said that the current electoral system produces outcomes that reflect the values and beliefs of a small group of political Oregonians, not the values and beliefs of typical Oregonians from around the state.

Ranked choice voting tends to eliminate the more extreme candidates, especially in primaries, while supporting candidates with the widest support across the electorate. Supporters also say it increases voter participation.

If Measure 117 fails, as appears likely, Benton County would continue to use ranked choice voting while the same winner-take-all system would apply to other elections as it does now. 

Oregon joined four other states – Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Missouri and Nevada – in asking voters about ranked choice voting in this year’s election.

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