Unity in Identity

Ranked Choice Voting: How it works, Where it came from, & the Philosophical case for reform


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In this episode, we begin a rigorous, two-part exploration of Ranked Choice Voting (RCV)—one of the most consequential and contested electoral reforms in modern American democracy. Used today in 51 jurisdictions, including Maine, Alaska, and New York City, and banned outright in 17 states, RCV sits at the center of a growing national debate over fairness, representation, and the meaning of majority rule.

This first installment focuses on understanding the case for Ranked Choice Voting. We start with the fundamentals, breaking down exactly how RCV works, why it differs from traditional plurality (“first-past-the-post”) elections, and how it aims to address problems like vote-splitting, spoiler candidates, minority winners, and costly runoff elections. Through concrete examples, the mechanics of ranking, elimination, and vote transfers become clear and accessible.

From there, we place RCV in historical context, tracing its origins to the Progressive Era, its adoption by major American cities in the early 20th century, its mid-century repeal during periods of political backlash, and its modern resurgence in the 21st century. This history reveals that today’s debate is not new, but part of a recurring struggle over power, party control, and democratic legitimacy.

The episode then turns to the deeper philosophical questions behind voting systems themselves. Drawing on thinkers like Condorcet, John Stuart Mill, and Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, we examine a central truth: no voting system is perfect. Every system involves tradeoffs, and democratic reform is ultimately about deciding which imperfections we are willing to accept.

Finally, we evaluate the evidence supporters present—on voter understanding, majority legitimacy, reduced negative campaigning, coalition-building, increased representation, and cost savings. This episode presents the strongest version of the pro-RCV argument, setting the stage for a full and fair examination of the critiques in Part Two.

This is not advocacy—it is civic education. The goal is understanding first, judgment second.

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Unity in IdentityBy Derek Gutierrez