RVC by allaboutgeorge, http://www.flickr.com/photos/allaboutgeorge/5139810211/
by
While political representation for people of color continues to
decline nationally, the San Francisco Bay Area has benefited from
political reforms that have boosted the number of minority elected
officials —and made ethnic voters excited to participate in the
electoral process.
Not surprisingly, the old guard hasn’t taken lightly to these challenges to its power. Now reforms such as ranked-choice voting (RCV) and public financing of campaigns are under attack from mainstream media and business groups.
RCV
(also known as instant runoff) allows voters to select their first-,
second- and third- choice candidates when they cast their ballots for
city officials, thus avoiding costly runoff elections. Last November,
RCV helped Oakland’s Jean Quan
overcome a 4-to-1 spending advantage by the favorite, Democratic
powerhouse Don Perata, to become the first Asian-American woman directly
elected mayor of a major U.S. city.
In San Francisco, meanwhile,
RCV and public financing have helped elect the most diverse Board of
Supervisors in the city’s history. Currently, eight out of 11
supervisors are people of color, including four Asians (three of whom
are Chinese); three are female and two are openly gay. Since RCV and
public financing became the law, the number of people of color elected
to the Board of Supervisors has doubled.
The ability of diverse communities to choose their own representatives is an important indicator of the health of our democracy.
But two leading San Francisco institutions—the San Francisco Chronicle and the Chamber of Commerce, whose president, Steve Falk, is the Chronicle’s former publisher— are urging repeal of RCV and a return to the old runoff system.
Oddly,
RCV opponents (including political consultants whose candidates, such
as Perata, have lost in RCV races) are calling multiracial coalition
building "gaming the system." Instead of asking how these well-paid
consultants could have run more effective campaigns, they are blaming
RCV.
Reform 1: An End to Vote-Splitting
Perhaps
the most important way that RCV helps voters of color is by allowing
several candidates from the same ethnic community to run against each
other without splitting the ethnic vote. In 2008, RCV made it possible
for four strong Latino candidates to compete in San Francisco’s heavily
Hispanic District 9 without fear of losing to a non-Latino because
voters could rank several candidates as their first, second, and third
choices.
Last November, RCV allowed District 10—one of the last
remaining black communities in San Francisco—to elect an
African-American supervisor despite a crowded field. Malia Cohen won by
picking up the second- and third-choice votes of supporters of other
black (and white and Asian) candidates.
The next big test of RCV
happens this fall, when, for the first time, San Francisco’s mayoral
election will be subject to ranked-choice balloting. The field includes
at least three Asian candidates: state Senator Leland Yee,
Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting, and Board of Supervisors President David
Chiu.
If the city were still using the old voting system, there
is no doubt that the Asian vote would split among these candidates,
possibly resulting in none of them making it into the December runoff.
To prevent that from happening, the Asian community would have already
seen all sorts of backroom wheeling and dealing, as powerbrokers twisted
arms to keep two of those candidates out of the race.
But with
RCV, all of them can run—generating unprecedented excitement in the
Asian community. Whichever candidate proves strongest will emerge with
the most Asian first-, second- and third-place votes
Reform 2: More Voters Have a Say
RCV
also has significantly boosted the ability of voters—especially in
communities of color—to have a say in the final outcome of an election.
This is because RCV takes advantage of the turnout and excitement
generated during November elections—when more people tend to come to the
polls because of presidential, congressional and gubernatorial
elections than turn out to vote in June primaries or December runoffs.
In the 2010 Oakland mayoral election, held in November, some 119,000 voters cast ballots, compared with 84,000 in the 2006 election, held in June. That’s a huge increase—42 percent.
But
the greater impact is felt after the first round of RCV votes are
counted. In RCV, as in regular elections, any candidate who wins more
than 50 percent of the vote in the first round is the winner. But in
cases where there is no clear victor, RCV factors in second- and
third-choice votes—which gives a lot more voters a say in picking the
final winner than happens in runoffs (where the turnout is almost always
lower, so the ultimate choice is made by a much smaller pool of
voters.) In Oakland, for example, Jean Quan won with 54,000 votes,
versus 42,000 for Ron Dellums in 2006.
In the 34 races held in
San Francisco since the first RCV election in 2004, nearly all have seen
more voters participating in the final RCV tally than in the old
December runoffs. A study of the 2005 Assessor Recorder's race found
that RCV had increased citywide voter participation in the decisive
round of that race by 168 percent, or 120,000 voters more than if there
had been a December runoff. Moreover, the study found that voter
participation tripled in six of the poorest and most diverse
neighborhoods due to having a single RCV election in November.
Reform 3: Big Money No Longer Beats All
RCV
also has reduced the impact of money in elections—a critical issue
since the U.S. Supreme Court’s disasterous decision in the Citizens United
case last year gave carte blanche to corporate interests seeking to
influence the political process. With no runoff to worry about,
candidates only have to raise enough funds for the November election.
More
important, to win they have to get out into the community to earn
second and third rankings from supporters of other candidates. With RCV,
grassroots campaigning can be more influential than big-money ads.
Apparently the Chronicle—which
endorsed Perata as well as two Board of Supervisors candidates who lost
because of RCV—does not value diversity and broad representation. Since
last November's election, the Chronicle has published more than three dozen articles, columns and blog posts highlighting RCV elections, many with a negative slant. One column calling for repeal of RCV was written by the Chronicle’s editorial page editor. Another anti-RCV article,
the day’s lead story, was based on a methodologically dubious poll
commissioned by the Chamber of Commerce, an RCV opponent, and purporting
to show that RCV confuses many voters.
Yet the Chronicle
has never reported on two exit poll studies conducted by respected
researchers at San Francisco State University from in 2004-05 that
showed that 87 percent of respondents said they "understood" RCV.
Wouldn’t those SFSU polls have been worth a mention in an article about
voter confusion?
Do we detect a pattern here? If the Chronicle
truly believes RCV is confusing, why didn’t it publish more articles
aimed at educating voters before last November’s election?
What do the Chronicle and the Chamber of Commerce have against representation from communities of color? That's what everyone should be asking them.
Esperanza Tervalon-Daumont is executive director of Oakland Rising (www.oaklandrising.org) and Alicia Garza is co-executive director of People Organized to Win Employment Rights (POWER) in San Francisco (www.peopleorganized.org).
Cross published at New America Media.
OK, so I want to start out by saying that I believe in RCV. I believe it increases turnout. I believe it opens up elections to a wider field of candidates and a wider field of ideas. I believe the Chronicle and the Chamber of Commerce are making critiques based on faulty premises.
However, as far as Oakland is concerned, I think that some of Ms. Garcia and Ms. Tervalon-Daumont's assumptions about the benefits of RCV are incorrect.
Let's consider the point about creating more opportunities for candidates of color to win.
Before the 2010 RCV election, Oakland's 11 elected officials could be demographically listed as follows: 6 caucasians, 5 people of color. 8 women, 3 men. 10 straight, 1 out lesbian.
After the RCV election, Oakland's 11 elected officials were: 7 caucasians, 4 people of color. 9 women, 2 men. 10 straight, 1 out lesbian.
That's a net loss of one person of color, a net gain of one woman, and the LGBT ratio is unchanged.
Also, consider that Ms. Tervalon-Daumont and I are about the same age, and in our lifetimes there has been only one Mayor who was not a person of color: Jerry Brown. Oakland seems to have a very healthy level of diversity in public office. We also have very strong diversity in our unelected municipal workforce.
This doesn't mean that we should stop being vigilant about diversity and empowerment. It just means that we need to take credit for one of the few things that our city government has actually done right. (as an aside, if we really want to examine a diversity problem in the 2012 election, consider that there were no viable Black or Latino candidates for Mayor in a city that's 27% black and 25% latino!)
Next, let's consider Jean Quan's victory over Don Perata. Both Quan and Perata had held public office for decades. Neither can be considered an outsider candidate. They were both establishment candidates, they were just representing different factions of the establishment.
Even Rebecca Kaplan cannot be considered a true outsider. Unlike Perata or Quan, she held a citywide elected post while she was running. While she had only served in elected office for about ten years as opposed to Perata and Quan's totals of about 20 years in office, Kaplan is also 20 years younger than Perata and Quan - she would have had to be elected at age 18 to have served as long as her opponents.
Consider that besides Perata, Quan and Kaplan, no candidate broke 10%. All the outsiders got their butts whipped. RCV didn't change that element of the status quo.
Now, to the very important point about Jean Quan beating Don Perata while being outspent: Jean Quan has also won non-RCV elections while being outspent. She spoke about this repeatedly during her campaign. In a race for District 4, David Stein outspent Jean Quan 2-1. Quan has also mentioned being outspent in her race for school board.
So what does that tell us? Well, in the article above, it explicitly states that Don Perata lost because of RCV. I disagree. Don Perata lost because Jean Quan has got game. It's likely that had this been a runoff election, Jean Quan would have won. It seems odd to me that people who supported her race would dilute the credit that Quan deserves for winning by ascribing undue credit to RCV. I didn't vote for Quan as any of my three choices, but I must acknowledge her electioneering talent.
I want to reiterate that I do support RCV, and I want to say that the Chronicle and the Chamber, in my opinion, are clearly not opposing RCV from a race based perspective. They're just upset that their candidates of choice lost, and they're looking for something to blame.
That the Chron, the Chamber, and Oakland Rising are incorrect to pin too much credit for this election's outcome on RCV. It was the candidates that won and lost the races, it wasn't the voting method. RCV made the election cheaper, included more voices in the debates, and increased participation.
These are all good things, but RCV is not so powerful and significant as to have changed the game of insider politics in a single election cycle. If it could do that, it probably never would have been implemented in the first place.