Ballot in question:

Mayor:

District 1:

  • pregnantwithrage@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I guess I don’t understand why this is such a difficult concept to understand.

    Pick as many or as little candidates you want for the position and then rank them.

    If you are wanting to phone it in just vote for the one candidate like the old system.

      • skizzles@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I feel like if they would have put Choice 1, Choice 2 or 1st Choice, 2nd Choice it might have gone over better.

        I mean, it’s not like it doesn’t make sense how it is, but it could have been simplified even further. Some people apparently need that.

        Could have easily been written that way on purpose also to discourage people from using it.

        I mean it’s just like asking a kid what they want for Christmas. If you ask them to give you a list they will probably let you know exactly which ones they want the most. It’s really not that difficult but people often overthink these things and this is what you end up with.

  • TempermentalAnomaly@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    In east Portland, the city’s poorest and most racially diverse quadrant, a combination of low voter turnout and low rates of ranking even a single City Council candidate by voters who did cast ballots meant only 39% of registered voters had any say in which three candidates will represent the district, the newsroom analysis found.

    I wonder if voter turnout was below, about even, or above the average for the last 20 years. And then what percentage of registered voters had a say in those. Hopefully, the city council and ranked choice voting advocates will do some outreach.

    In the district encompassing Portland east of Interstate 205, 29% of residents who cast ballots didn’t rank any of the 16 candidates running. That figure was 18% in North and Northeast Portland (22 candidates); 17% in Southeast Portland (30 candidates); 17% in the city’s westside district (30 candidates); and an average of 20% citywide. Only 7% of voters who cast ballots in the November 2022 election sat out the highly polarized City Council runoff between Jo Ann Hardesty and Rene Gonzalez. And 13% did in the fall 2020 contest between Chloe Eudaly and Mingus Mapps.

    In a linked article:

    The portion of Portland east of Interstate 205, home to nearly a quarter of the city’s population and its least economically advantaged stretch, had just two residents elected to the council in all of city history.

    Now it’s five. This isn’t an excuse to not do outreach, but this shows far more directly that the people from their neighborhoods are representing them. I hope council members will do community building events.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      1 month ago

      The difference is, prior to this election, city council seats were chosen in city wide elections.

      Now each of the four districts are guaranteed 3 seats. That’s the #1 reason we voted to change our system of government.

      But you can’t look at prior elections because those didn’t work the same way, the districts didn’t exist then.

      So, in 2020, one council seat was up for election:

      https://www.portland.gov/auditor/elections/city-election-results/2020-city-elections-results

      Mingus Mapps - 187,386 - 55.59%
      Chloe Eudaly - 146,399 - 43.43%
      Write-In - 3,376 - 0.97%
      Total Votes Cast - 337,061 - 100.00%

      So across the entire city, 337,061 votes cast.

      In 2024, if you total up all the votes for all the candidates in Districts 1-4…

      https://www.portland.gov/auditor/elections/city-election-prelim-results

      Looking just at the first round of voting assuming 1 vote per person equals the most accurate count of total votes:

      District 1 - 23,189 votes across 16 candidates + write ins.
      District 2 - 41,908 - 22 candidates + write ins
      District 3 - 46,039 - 30 candidates + write ins
      District 4 - 45,044 - 30 candidates + write ins
      Total votes, all candidates, 156,180

      So that’s 46.33% of the votes of the 2020 election.