Baltimore City Council
File #: 19-0128R    Version: 0 Name: Request for State Action - Ranked Choice Voting or Open Primaries
Type: City Council Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 1/14/2019 In control: City Council
On agenda: Final action: 1/14/2019
Enactment #:
Title: Request for State Action - Ranked Choice Voting or Open Primaries For the purpose of calling on the General Assembly to pass and the Governor to sign HB26, which authorizes Baltimore City to adopt either a ranked choice or open primary election voting system, to ensure inclusive and democratic elections for City officials.
Sponsors: Bill Henry, Brandon M. Scott, Ryan Dorsey, Zeke Cohen, Shannon Sneed, Kristerfer Burnett, President Young, Robert Stokes, Sr., John T. Bullock, Edward Reisinger
Indexes: Request for State Action
Attachments: 1. 19-0128R~1st Reader, 2. Completed File_19-0128R
* Warning: This is an unofficial, introductory copy of the bill.
The official copy considered by the City Council is the first reader copy.
Introductory*

City of Baltimore
Council Bill R
(Resolution)

Introduced by: Councilmembers Henry and Scott

A Resolution Entitled

A Council Resolution concerning
title
Request for State Action - Ranked Choice Voting or Open Primaries
For the purpose of calling on the General Assembly to pass and the Governor to sign HB26, which authorizes Baltimore City to adopt either a ranked choice or open primary election voting system, to ensure inclusive and democratic elections for City officials.
body

Recitals

Baltimore, unlike most major cities, selects party candidates for the general election through partisan primaries. Since Baltimore voters are overwhelmingly registered Democrats and no
non-Democrat has been elected to a major City office for decades, this effectively means that the
preferences of Baltimore's thousands of non-Democratic voters have no impact on the selection
of our elected officials.

Equally troubling, the fact that a primary candidate can secure the nomination and the party's sole spot on the general election ballot, with a plurality of votes rather than an outright majority, means that in a crowded field of candidates the party nomination can easily go to someone who a majority of primary voters actually voted against. Under these circumstances, we could find ourselves in a city of well over half a million being governed by people who were the first choice of only a few thousand residents - a profoundly anti...

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