In the latest rebuke to Rep. Bruce Poliquin’s (R-Maine) repeated attempts to hold onto his seat in Maine’s 2nd congressional district after losing the midterm election, a federal judge threw out his lawsuit in which the two-term congressman claimed the state’s use of ranked choice voting (RCV) was unconstitutional and unfair to voters.
Local advocacy groups applauded as U.S. District Court Judge Lance Walker rejected Poliquin’s claim that the use of RCV, which has been endorsed repeatedly by Maine voters, violates Mainers’ First Amendment rights and the Voting Rights Act, as well as his argument that the system is confusing to voters.
“Mr. Poliquin and his attorneys threw everything but the kitchen sink at Ranked Choice Voting and the Court defended Maine’s law in full,” said Kyle Bailey, campaign manager for the Committee for Ranked Choice Voting, in a statement.
The Committee also expressed hope that the success of the system in Maine will pave the way for wider use across the country.
The federal court “ruled today that the people of Maine have a right to choose the way we elect our leaders,” Cara Brown, the committee’s treasurer, said. “With this historic ruling, we predict that Ranked Choice Voting will sweep the nation.”
“Mr. Poliquin and his attorneys threw everything but the kitchen sink at Ranked Choice Voting and the Court defended Maine’s law in full.” —Kyle Bailey, Committee for Ranked Choice VotingPoliquin failed to gather more than 50 percent of first-choice vote on November 6, when, under the RCV system, voters were able to rank Poliquin, Democratic challenger Jared Golden, and independents Tiffany Bond and William Hoar with the numbers one through four instead of just selecting one candidate. Election officials then distributed Bond’s and Hoar’s supporters’ second and third choices until either the Democrat or Republican gained a majority.
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