HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 815        FILED ON: 1/14/2019

HOUSE  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  No. 719

 

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

_________________

PRESENTED BY:

Andres X. Vargas and Adrian C. Madaro

_________________

To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in General
Court assembled:

The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the adoption of the accompanying bill:

An Act relative to ranked choice voting.

_______________

PETITION OF:

 

Name:

District/Address:

Date Added:

Andres X. Vargas

3rd Essex

1/14/2019

Adrian C. Madaro

1st Suffolk

3/19/2019

Mike Connolly

26th Middlesex

1/22/2019

Tami L. Gouveia

14th Middlesex

1/22/2019

Maria Duaime Robinson

6th Middlesex

1/22/2019

Jack Patrick Lewis

7th Middlesex

1/22/2019

Daniel M. Donahue

16th Worcester

1/22/2019

Denise Provost

27th Middlesex

1/23/2019

Jason M. Lewis

Fifth Middlesex

1/23/2019

Lori A. Ehrlich

8th Essex

1/23/2019

Steven Ultrino

33rd Middlesex

1/24/2019

Julian Cyr

Cape and Islands

1/24/2019

Natalie M. Higgins

4th Worcester

1/25/2019

Christine P. Barber

34th Middlesex

1/28/2019

Aaron Vega

5th Hampden

1/28/2019

David Allen Robertson

19th Middlesex

1/28/2019

Dylan A. Fernandes

Barnstable, Dukes and Nantucket

1/28/2019

Sean Garballey

23rd Middlesex

1/28/2019

Natalie M. Blais

1st Franklin

1/28/2019

Carmine Lawrence Gentile

13th Middlesex

1/28/2019

Tram T. Nguyen

18th Essex

1/28/2019

Elizabeth A. Malia

11th Suffolk

1/28/2019

Mary S. Keefe

15th Worcester

1/29/2019

Christina A. Minicucci

14th Essex

1/29/2019

Peter Capano

11th Essex

1/29/2019

Michael J. Barrett

Third Middlesex

1/29/2019

Mathew J. Muratore

1st Plymouth

1/29/2019

Thomas M. Stanley

9th Middlesex

1/29/2019

Kenneth I. Gordon

21st Middlesex

1/29/2019

Lindsay N. Sabadosa

1st Hampshire

1/29/2019

Jennifer E. Benson

37th Middlesex

1/29/2019

Sarah K. Peake

4th Barnstable

1/29/2019

Denise C. Garlick

13th Norfolk

1/30/2019

Jay D. Livingstone

8th Suffolk

1/30/2019

James B. Eldridge

Middlesex and Worcester

1/30/2019

Tommy Vitolo

15th Norfolk

1/30/2019

Bud L. Williams

11th Hampden

1/30/2019

Kay Khan

11th Middlesex

1/30/2019

Edward F. Coppinger

10th Suffolk

1/30/2019

Michelle M. DuBois

10th Plymouth

1/30/2019

Michelle L. Ciccolo

15th Middlesex

1/30/2019

Sal N. DiDomenico

Middlesex and Suffolk

1/31/2019

Daniel R. Carey

2nd Hampshire

1/31/2019

Alan Silvia

7th Bristol

1/31/2019

James Arciero

2nd Middlesex

1/31/2019

Paul Brodeur

32nd Middlesex

2/1/2019

Sonia Chang-Diaz

Second Suffolk

2/1/2019

Marjorie C. Decker

25th Middlesex

1/31/2019

Mindy Domb

3rd Hampshire

1/31/2019

Nika C. Elugardo

15th Suffolk

1/31/2019

William C. Galvin

6th Norfolk

1/31/2019

Carlos González

10th Hampden

2/1/2019

James K. Hawkins

2nd Bristol

1/31/2019

Stephan Hay

3rd Worcester

1/31/2019

Jonathan Hecht

29th Middlesex

1/31/2019

Russell E. Holmes

6th Suffolk

2/1/2019

Patricia D. Jehlen

Second Middlesex

2/1/2019

John J. Lawn, Jr.

10th Middlesex

2/1/2019

David Henry Argosky LeBoeuf

17th Worcester

1/31/2019

Paul W. Mark

2nd Berkshire

2/1/2019

Liz Miranda

5th Suffolk

1/31/2019

Brian W. Murray

10th Worcester

2/1/2019

Rebecca L. Rausch

Norfolk, Bristol and Middlesex

2/1/2019

David M. Rogers

24th Middlesex

1/31/2019

Jon Santiago

9th Suffolk

1/31/2019


HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 815        FILED ON: 1/14/2019

HOUSE  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  No. 719

By Messrs. Vargas of Haverhill and Madaro of Boston, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 719) of Andres X. Vargas and others relative to the use of ranked choice voting in certain elections.  Election Laws.

 

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

 

_______________

In the One Hundred and Ninety-First General Court
(2019-2020)

_______________

 

An Act relative to ranked choice voting.

 

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
 

SECTION 1.

Section 1 of chapter 50 of the General Laws is hereby amended, by inserting after the definition of “Primary” and prior to the definition of “Registrars”, the following definition:—

“Ranked Choice Voting” shall mean, in the case of elections and primaries for which ballots are prepared in accordance with section 43A of chapter 54, a method of casting and tabulating ballots in which voters rank candidates in order of preference, tabulation proceeds in sequential rounds in which last-place candidates are defeated and the candidate with the most votes in the final round is elected.

SECTION 2.

Section 2 of said chapter 50 is hereby amended by adding the following sentence to the end of said section:—

The determination of the person receiving the highest number of votes for an office in a Ranked Choice Voting election shall be governed by sections 2A and 2B of chapter 50.

SECTION 3.

Said chapter 50 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 2 the following section 2A:—

Section 2A. As used in this section and section 2B, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings:

"Active preference" means the highest continuing ranking on a continuing ballot.

"Batch elimination" means the simultaneous defeat of multiple candidates because, with respect to such candidates, either of the following applies:

(a) The candidate cannot be elected because the candidate's active preference total in a round of the Ranked Choice Voting tabulation plus the total of all continuing ballots that could possibly be transferred to the candidate in future rounds from candidates with fewer active preferences or an equal number of active preferences would not be enough to surpass the candidate with the next-higher active preference total in the round; or

(b) The candidate has a lower active preference total than a candidate described in subparagraph (a).

"Continuing ballot" means a ballot that is not an inactive ballot.

"Continuing candidate" means a candidate who has not been defeated.

"Highest continuing ranking" means the highest ranking on a voter's ballot for a continuing candidate.

"Inactive ballot" means a ballot that does not rank any continuing candidate, contains an overvote at the highest continuing ranking, or contains two or more sequential skipped rankings before its highest continuing ranking.

"Last-place candidate" means (a) the candidate with the lowest active preference total in a round of the Ranked Choice Voting tabulation, and (b) any other candidate that is subject to batch elimination.

"Overvote" means a circumstance in which a voter has ranked more than one candidate at the same ranking.

"Ranking" means the number assigned on a ballot by a voter to a candidate to express the voter's preference for that candidate. Ranking number one is the highest ranking, ranking number two is the next-highest ranking and so on.

"Round" means an instance of the sequence of voting tabulation steps established in subsection 1 of section 2B.

"Skipped ranking" means a circumstance in which a voter has left a ranking blank and ranks a candidate at a subsequent ranking.

SECTION 4.

Said chapter 50 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 2A the following section 2B:—

Section 2B. The following shall apply for determining the results of Ranked Choice Voting elections.

1. Procedures. Except as provided in subsection 2, the following procedures are used to determine the person receiving the highest number of votes, for purposes of section 2 of chapter 50, in an election for an office elected by Ranked Choice Voting. Tabulation must proceed in rounds. In each round, the number of active preferences for each continuing candidate must be counted. Each continuing ballot counts as one active preference for its highest-ranked continuing candidate for that round. Inactive ballots are not counted for any continuing candidate. The round then ends with one of the following two potential outcomes.

A. If there are more than two continuing candidates, the last-place candidate, or candidates, is defeated and a new round begins.

B. If there are two or fewer continuing candidates, the candidate with the most active preferences is determined to be the person receiving the highest number of votes.

2. Ties. If two or more last-place candidates are tied and batch elimination does not apply, the last-place candidate who was credited with the fewest active preferences in the prior round shall be declared defeated. If two or more of such tied candidates were tied in the prior round also, the second tie shall be decided by referring similarly to the standing of candidates, in terms of active preferences, in the second-prior round. This principle shall be applied successively as many times as may be necessary, a tie shown in any prior round being decided by referring to the standing of the tied candidates in the round immediately preceding the round in which the tie exists. Any tie not otherwise provided for shall be decided by lot.

3. Effect on the definition of political party. For the purposes of determining the percentage of the entire vote cast in the commonwealth for an office to be filled by all the voters of the commonwealth, as provided in the definition of “political party” in Section 1 of chapter 50, the number of votes cast for a party's candidate for an applicable office elected by Ranked Choice Voting shall be the number of active preferences credited to that candidate after the initial counting in the first round described in subsection 1.

SECTION 5.

Section 1 of chapter 53 of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking out the second sentence and inserting in place thereof the following:—

A party that makes one or more nominations shall be entitled to have the name of each of its candidates printed on the ballot to be used at the ensuing election; but, unless the nomination is made in a primary for which ballots are prepared in accordance with section 43A of chapter 54 or in several caucuses held in more than one ward or in more than one precinct or group of precincts by direct plurality vote, a certificate of nomination must be filed as provided in section five.

SECTION 6.

Section 2 of said chapter 53 is hereby amended by striking out the second sentence and inserting in place thereof the following:—

All nominations and elections in primaries for which ballots are prepared in accordance with section 43A of chapter 54 shall use Ranked Choice Voting for determining the person receiving the highest number of votes.  All nominations and elections in caucuses shall be by direct plurality vote.

SECTION 7.

Chapter 54 of the General Laws is hereby further amended by inserting after section 43A the following section 43B:—

Section 43B. All elections for which ballots are prepared in accordance with section 43A and for which only one person is to be elected shall, for the purposes of section 2 of chapter 50, use Ranked Choice Voting for determining the person receiving the highest number of votes for an office other than presidential electors.  The election of presidential electors shall be by direct plurality vote.

SECTION 8.

Section 77 of chapter 54 of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking the phrase “marking a cross (X) in the square at the right of the name of each candidate for whom he intends to vote” and inserting in place thereof the following phrase: “marking the ballot in a manner prescribed by the state secretary”.

SECTION 9.

Section 78 of chapter 54 of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking the phrase “mark a cross (X) in the square at the right of the names of the group of candidates for said offices for whom he desires to vote” in the third sentence and inserting in place thereof the following phrase: “mark the ballot in a manner prescribed by the state secretary”.

SECTION 10.

The state secretary shall adopt and promulgate regulations consistent with this act, which regulations shall ensure that ballots using Ranked Choice Voting shall be simple and easy to understand. As soon as practicable, the state secretary shall ensure that all voting equipment in the commonwealth is capable of effecting Ranked Choice Voting. In addition, the state secretary shall conduct a voter education campaign to familiarize voters with Ranked Choice Voting.

SECTION 11.

This act applies to elections held on or after January 1, 2022.