ALL INDY: Alaska’s Reformers Will Protect Electoral Innovations and Break New Ground in 2026

Alaska road with mountains in the background.
Photo by Tobias Tullius on Unsplash.
Created: 28 Jan, 2025
Updated: 29 Jan, 2025
2 min read

Ballotpedia reports this week that in 2026, Alaska’s independent voters will have the chance to solidify their role as election reform pioneers by voting on two initiatives: One protects the transformative voting method approved by voters in 2020 and 2024 and another proposes bold new campaign finance limits.

Alaska voters use a system that empowers them to choose any candidate they want in the primary, regardless of party, and then rank the top 4 candidates in order of preference on the general election ballot. 

This puts them at the forefront of electoral innovation because, like in Maine, California, Nebraska, Louisiana, and Washington, Alaskan citizens have voted to abolish the destructive and partisan first-past-the-post voting system, which stifles competition and leads to spoilers. 

Alaska's system, first adopted by a majority statewide vote in 2020, has been widely celebrated for reducing polarization and ensuring candidates win with majority support. 

ALSO READ: Populism A Key Factor with Cross-Partisan Support for Alaska's Top 4 Elections, Research Finds

This is what ‘We the people’ means – that voters, not the parties, have the power to chart our state’s future,” said Scott Kendall, longtime advocate of Alaska’s reform.

“These reforms will make our politicians answerable to the voters. They will also reward, rather than punish, bipartisanship. The nation’s greatest state now has the nation’s best election system, and as a result, Alaska’s brightest days lie ahead.”

Politicians in Alaska are free to lead because of how they are elected. They owe their allegiance to a broad swath of the electorate, not strictly to one major political party or the other.

Nevertheless, in 2026, another repeal initiative will seek to overturn the voters' will, as expressed in 2020 and again in 2024. The state's forward-thinking approach to elections and steadfast protection of the new system will be worth watching in the 2026 cycle. 

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A campaign finance reform initiative on the 2026 ballot also allows Alaskans to lead by example. Following a court ruling invalidating prior contribution limits, the proposed measure aims to establish fair, transparent limits on donations, reducing the influence of significant contributions while maintaining space for civic participation. 

Individuals could contribute up to $2,000 per election cycle to candidates and $5,000 annually to political parties, with reasonable caps for groups and joint campaigns. 

In 2026, these two initiatives will allow Alaskans to reinforce their commitment to fairness, transparency, and modern electoral practices, setting a brilliant example for other states

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