Proponents of Final-Four or Final-Five Voting, which puts all candidates on one "jungle primary" ballot and enacts ranked-choice voting in the general, argue it promotes compromise, action and civility in politics.


State Sen. Jeff Smith, D-Eau Claire. Photo submitted by Smith's office.

Sara Eskrich, the executive director of Democracy Found, a Wisconsin-based organization that advocates for Final-Five Voting.

This article first appeared on The Badger Project and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Comments

Josie Pillman

I do not think that rank choice voting is a good idea. Just because the process of compromise takes work and time, does not make our present system worse.  The ranked choice does cause a shift of power. 

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