VTDigger ran an article on Gov Scott allowing Burlington to determine how we run our local elections, but it shows a lack of understanding of local history and does not interrogate misleading statements made by the governor.
"One person, one vote"
The third paragraph states that the Governor "made clear that he opposed a statewide system of ranked choice voting because he believes 'one person should get one vote, and candidates who get the most votes should win elections.' "
Here Gov Scott is spreading the false narrative that ranked choice voting constitutes giving people multiple votes. In March 2009, Burlington Ward 7 voters did not elect a winner in the City councilor race between Vincent Dober, Ellie Blais, and Eli Lesser-Goldsmith, and a runoff was held at a later date between Dober and Lesser-Goldsmith. People who voted for Blais on March 3 were rightly allowed to participate in the runoff election. Transferring your single vote to later stages of an instant runoff are no different.
By blindly reprinting the Governor's words without remark, VTDigger helps to perpetuate the lie.
Prior history of ranked choice voting in Burlington
The fourth paragraph states:
In his letter, the governor referred to an earlier era of ranked choice voting in Burlington. The city adopted the system for all city elections in 2005 but discarded it in 2010 after it led to the election of Progressive Mayor Bob Kiss — who had not won a plurality of votes and whose tenure ended in scandal.
There are two problems with this paragraph:
- The city only used ranked choice for the mayoral elections of 2006 and 2009, and no other elections.
- The paragraph implies that Kiss only won re-election in 2009 because of ranked choice voting. In fact, under the current rules, no one would have won the 2009 mayoral election in the first round because no one had 40% of the vote. There would then have been a runoff between Kiss and Wright. By looking at the ranked choice ballots, we can see that Kiss would have won this traditional runoff election.