NEW YORK, NY (06/23/2021) (readMedia)-- Nearly 1.1 million New Yorkers made history voting in the largest and most diverse ranked choice voting election in the United States. Voters experienced the many benefits of ranked choice voting - they were enthusiastic about the voting experience, more engaged and informed about the candidates they voted for, and glad to leave a greater impact on the final results. And, thanks to ranked choice voting, they avoided a costly runoff election.
For the first time in 20 years since Michael Bloomberg won the general election in 2001 with 50.3%, the leading candidate for Mayor will have been elected with a clear mandate.
"New Yorkers successfully voted in the largest ranked choice voting election in U.S. history!" said Susan Lerner, executive director of Common Cause/NY. "The election went smoothly, and voters can be certain that our next Mayor, Borough Presidents, Comptroller, and City Council members are the candidates preferred by the most voters. Ranked choice voting affords voters more choice and more voice and puts power back in the hands of the people, delivering consensus majority winners every time. That's the robust democracy we need right now."
Rank the Vote NYC distributed over 1 million pieces of informational literature and partnered with over 750 organizations to conduct 500 + trainings for campaigns and voters. Canvassers knocked directly on 55,000 doors in the week before Election Day. Throughout Early Voting and on Election Day, over 100 Election Protection volunteers were stationed at poll sites across the city answering questions about ranked choice voting as well.
Rank the Vote NYC also conducted in-person exit polling which will be made available on June 28th.
Previous polling indicates:
And in exit polling from the special elections earlier this year:
There were 51 ranked choice voting elections yesterday, with 352 candidates running. Two-thirds of the citywide races did not have a majority winner, and will be determined after ranked choice voting rounds.
Across the five boroughs, New Yorkers were overwhelmingly enthusiastic about ranked choice voting.
They found it easy.
They were more engaged and informed than in past elections.
They appreciated the larger say they have in the final election results.
And they found it exciting!
Diversity and Representation in the Mayor's Race
Thanks to ranked choice voting, we're seeing increased diversity in the leading contenders for mayor and City Council. 29 women are leading their council races, meaning for the first time ever, the New York City council could be majority women.
And in the mayoral race, the top four first choice finishers included three candidates of color and two women.
Ranked choice voting radically alters who can be a leading contender by reducing pressure on candidates to drop out and avoid vote splitting. What we're seeing in New York is consistent with a new FairVote study that proves this phenomenon: candidates pay no penalty when they run against opponents of the same race or ethnicity. For example, instead of dividing Black community support, Adams and Wiley can run against each other as serious contenders.
When to Expect Results
Voters can expect to know the final winner in a few weeks -- thanks to pro-voter election laws. Currently, state law doesn't allow the Board of Elections (BOE) to begin counting ballots until June 29. Why wait a week? Well, in New York a voter can vote via absentee and then later change their mind and vote in person (only the in person vote counts) so the BOE must check to make sure a voter only voted once. Then, absentee voters have a week for their ballots to get to the BOE (ballots must be postmarked by yesterday). And now, thanks to a new, excellent law, a voter can correct or "cure" their absentee ballot over a small mistake, like forgetting his or her signature. The BOE contacts voters about the opportunity to fix their mistake, and corrected ballots are due back by July 9.
Reminder: we likely wouldn't know the official results until at least July 12 even if this were a winner-take-all election like we've had in the past. That's because of two things:
RESULTS TIMELINE