NEW YORK, NY (06/27/2023) (readMedia)-- Today is Primary Day for New Yorkers! Susan Lerner, executive director of Common Cause/NY, is available for comment all day about the election and Ranked Choice Voting. Please reach out to Becky Stern at 516 581 5707 and becky@pythiapublic.com to schedule.
Remember:
More than 78,000 New Yorkers voted early. Susan Lerner, executive director of Common Cause/NY on those numbers:
"Early voting remains a smart and sound investment for New York, alleviating the burden on Election Day itself, providing the BOE with enough time to work out any kinks and letting voters vote on their own terms. It's not surprising that only a handful of New Yorkers have cast their ballots so far in an off-year election with only a limited number of competitive races. Turnout has never been the argument for early voting, it's about accessibility. We look forward to seeing what percentage of voters cast their ballot early vs on Election Day."
What will we know and when?
Results on Election night will only reflect in-person votes cast during the early voting period, on Election Day itself and received, valid absentee ballots that do not need to be cured. Affidavit ballots and absentee ballots received after early voting ends are not included. Therefore, election night results are incomplete. The BOE will update ballots counted and results of the rounds from ranked choice voting every week on Tuesday.
June 27: the NYC Board of Elections will tabulate the first RCV round to provide unofficial, and incomplete results. These will not include affidavit and all absentee ballots.
Week of July 3rd the BOE will release an updated RCV count with the absentee ballots they've received so far, and will continue to update these results weekly until all ballots are in and the count is certified.
July 11: likely date of final results which will include final round-by-round tabulation as needed.
This year, voters can expect to know a bit more information as the BOE has made helpful adjustments in terms of public reporting. Now New Yorkers will be able to see how many votes have been counted and what percentage is left in an easy to read fashion. The BOE will also clearly show how votes are transferred from one round to another.
Susan Lerner on Ranked Choice Voting and timeline:
"Democracy takes time, and every vote counts. Accurate and fair election results are worth waiting for. Even if no one clears 50% on Election Day, we'll get the results in a comparable amount of time with none of the additional cost. 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. It's a win-win for voters."
Expectations for Voters
RCV allows voters the opportunity to rank up to five candidates in order of preference. If no one wins with more than 50 percent of first-choice votes, the candidate that came in last is eliminated and their voters' second choice votes are distributed. This process repeats until there's a majority winner.
74% of New Yorkers voted to adopt ranked choice voting.
In 2021, Common Cause/NY and Rank the Vote NYC released the preliminary results of exit polling from the city's first ranked choice voting election. The poll was conducted by Edison Research throughout early voting and on Election Day, with a sample size of 1,662, both in-person and on the phone, with voters from a broad spectrum of ages, races, and education levels that reflect the demographics of the city. The poll shows that voters embraced the benefits of ranked choice voting, found it simple to understand, and want to use it in future elections.
Highlights include: