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Democracy Now! Video

Ranked-Choice Voting in NYC Primary May Help Progressives Defeat Billionaire-Backed Cuomo's Mayoral Bid

Democracy Now! Video

Democracy Now!

Daily News, News

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 18 June 2025

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We look at how ranked-choice voting works and what it could mean for New Yorkers heading to the polls in the primaries for local elections this Tuesday, with early voting already underway.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Democracy Now, Democracy Now.org, the Warren Peace Report. I'm Amy Goodman.

0:09.9

Ranked choice voting. As New Yorkers head to the polls and the primaries for upcoming local elections,

0:17.5

voters will have the chance to vote for not one, but up to five of their preferred candidates.

0:23.6

This is a brief explainer from the New York Board of Elections.

0:28.6

There's a new way for New Yorkers to have their say in city elections.

0:32.6

A way that gives voters more choices and can lead to more diverse winners. It's called ranked choice voting.

0:40.5

74% of New York voters chose to use it in primary and special elections for city offices,

0:46.2

mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president, and city council.

0:51.3

This is a relatively new system for New Yorkers.

0:55.1

It was introduced following a referendum in 2019.

0:59.2

It's also in use in Maine and Alaska and San Francisco.

1:04.2

It's gaining interest across the country.

1:07.0

We're joined now by John Tarleton.

1:09.2

He's editor-in-chief of the Independent, which is closely

1:12.8

following New York City's mayoral election. They had Zoran Mamdani on the cover of their January

1:19.5

issue. John's recent piece is headlines Zoran Mamdani's Path to Victory. They were also the

1:26.0

first publication to have AOC, Alexandra Casio-C

1:30.3

Cortes, before she was elected to Congress on their cover. Welcome, John, to Democracy

1:36.5

Now. Amy, it's great to be with you.

1:38.7

So R-C-V, ranked choice voting. Talk about what it is and how it came to New York, the whole history.

1:48.4

Sure. So ranked choice voting was first implemented in San Francisco in 2004, and it's now used in about 40 cities and towns across the United States, including in Oakland, Boulder, Colorado, Minneapolis,

2:02.6

Burlington, Vermont, Tacoma Park, Maryland, and other places, and it's also used statewide in

...

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