HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
1750 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
relating to ranked choice voting.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that ranked choice voting defies the basic principle of one-person, one-vote that is central to democracy. The purpose of this Act is to prohibit ranked choice voting from being instituted in the future and to repeal its current implementation for special elections and county council.
SECTION 2. Chapter 11, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§11- Prohibition on Ranked
Choice Voting. (a) The office of elections, chief elections
officer, city or county council, city or county clerk, may not authorize or
adopt or enforce in any manner a rule, resolution, or ordinance establishing a
system of voting for any office where:
(1) Voters rank
candidates in order of preference;
(2) Tabulation
proceeds in rounds where in each round either a candidate is elected or the
last place candidate is eliminated;
(3) Votes are
transferred from elected or eliminated candidates to the voter's next-ranked
candidate in order of preference; and
(4) Tabulation ends
when a candidate receives the majority of votes cast or the number of
candidates elected equals the number of offices to be filled."
SECTION 3. Section 11-100, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
"[[§11-100] Ranked-choice voting;
application; procedure. (a) Any federal election not held on the date of
a regularly scheduled primary or general election and any special election for
a vacant seat on a county council shall be conducted by ranked-choice voting.
(b) Except as provided in subsections (c) and
(d), the following procedures shall be used to determine the winner of an
election conducted by ranked-choice voting:
(1) Tabulation of
votes shall proceed in rounds;
(2) In each round,
the number of votes for each continuing candidate shall be counted, with each
continuing ballot counting as one vote for its highest-ranked continuing
candidate for that round;
(3) Inactive
ballots shall not be counted for any continuing candidate; and
(4) The round shall
end with one of two potential outcomes:
(A) If
there are two or fewer continuing candidates, the candidate with the most votes
shall be declared the winner of the election; or
(B) If
there are more than two continuing candidates, the last-place candidate shall
be defeated and a new round shall begin.
(c) A tie under this section between candidates
for the most votes in the final round or a tie between last-place candidates in
any round shall be decided by lot, and the candidate chosen by lot shall be:
(1) Declared the
winner if the tie is between candidates for the most votes in the final round;
or
(2) Defeated if the
tie is between last-place candidates in any round.
(d) The office of elections may modify a
ranked-choice voting ballot and tabulation; provided that:
(1) The number of
allowable rankings shall be limited to no fewer than six candidates; and
(2) Two or more
candidates may be defeated simultaneously by batch elimination in any round of
tabulation.
(e) For the purposes of this section:
"Batch elimination"
means the simultaneous defeat of multiple candidates for whom it is
mathematically impossible to be elected.
"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 the candidate with the fewest votes in a round of ranked-choice voting
tabulation.
"Mathematically impossible
to be elected", with respect to a candidate, means that:
(1) The candidate
cannot be elected because the candidate's vote total in a round of the
ranked-choice voting tabulation, plus all votes that could possibly be
transferred to the candidate in future rounds from candidates with an equal or
lower number of votes, would not be enough to surpass the candidate with the
next-higher vote total in the round; or
(2) The candidate
has a lower vote total than a candidate described in paragraph (1).
"Overvote" means a
circumstance in which a voter has ranked more than one candidate at the same
ranking on a ballot.
"Ranked-choice voting"
means the method of casting and tabulating votes 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.
"Ranking" means the
number assigned on a ballot by a voter to a candidate to express the voter's
preference for that candidate, in which the lowest number is the highest
ranking, and the highest number is the lowest ranking.
"Round" means an
instance of the sequence of voting tabulation steps established in subsection
(b).
"Skipped ranking" means
a circumstance in which a voter has left a ranking blank and ranks a candidate
at a subsequent ranking.]"
SECTION 4. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Minority Caucus Package; Ranked Choice Voting; Elections
Description:
Prohibits the use of ranked choice voting for any election. Repeals the provision allowing for ranked choice voting for certain positions and circumstances.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.