Congressmen Co-Lead Effort to Prohibit Ranked Choice Voting in Federal Elections

ballots in ballot box.
Photo by Philip Oroni on Unsplash. Unplash+ license obtained by editor.
Created: 29 Apr, 2025
2 min read

WASHINGTON, D.C. — US Rep. Nick Begich (R-Alaska), who was elected under Alaska’s ranked choice voting (RCV) system, and US Rep. Abraham Hamadeh (R-Arizona) are co-leading an effort to prohibit the use of RCV in federal elections. 

According to a joint press release issued by Begich and Hamadeh, the proposed Preventing Ranked Choice Corruption Act aims to amend the Help America Vote Act by banning RCV for US House, Senate, and presidential elections.

“The nation does not need more uncertainty and confusion injected into the federal election process,” Begich said. 

RCV allows voters to rank candidates in order of preference. If no candidate secures a majority of first-choice votes, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and their votes are redistributed.

This elimination process continues with additional rounds of instant runoff as needed until a single candidate achieves a majority.

In November 2024, Begich beat Rep. Mary Peltola with 51.3% of the vote after RCV results were tabulated. Peltola finished with 155,763 votes, behind the 164,117 garnered by Begich.

Begich did not receive a majority of votes in the first round of counting. Begich won the lion’s share of secondary votes from Alaska Independence Party candidate John Wayne Howe, receiving 4,783 votes while Peltola received only 2,702 votes.

Alaska, Maine, and Hawaii currently use RCV for at least some congressional elections. Maine voters adopted RCV in 2016 and 2018 and first used it on June 12, 2018, for all US House and Senate general elections. Mainers also used RCV for president in 2020 and 2024.

Hawaii adopted RCV in 2022 for special federal elections, as part of a measure signed into law by its Governor

IVP Donate

Alaska voters adopted Final Four Voting with Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) in the 2020 general election, and the system was used statewide in 2022 and 2024. Voters in Alaska protected RCV from repeal in 2024

In this article

Related articles

Vote sticker on a pole.
Majority Rules: The Film Capturing America’s Most Radical Election Reform
Alaskans made history in 2020 when they passed the first-in-the-nation election system that not only...
19 May, 2025
-
3 min read
Boston
Boston City Council Backs Ranked Choice Voting Home Rule Petition in 8–4 Vote
BOSTON, MASS. — On May 14, the Boston City Council voted 8–4 in favor of a allo...
14 May, 2025
-
3 min read
Half of image shows hand holding an I voted sticker. The other half shows Chula Vista City Hall.
Chula Vista Voters Want More Choice -- Will the City Council Listen?
CHULA VISTA, CALIF. - Voters in Chula Vista are signaling strong support for election reform. A rece...
14 May, 2025
-
2 min read

Latest articles

cannabis inside a plastic bag with marijuana symbol on it.
California Seizes $123.5M in Illegal Cannabis in Largest-Ever Enforcement Operation
In its largest coordinated crackdown to date, California’s Unified Cannabis Enforcement Task Force seized more than $123 million worth of illegal cannabis during a sweeping, multi-agency operation across the Central Valley....
20 May, 2025
-
2 min read
Presidential podium set up in White House.
Presidential Health: Who Determines When a President Is Unfit to Serve?
In this episode, Dan and Shawn examine how the system let this happen, how similar failures have played out in American history, and what it says about a two-party structure that forces voters to choose between different flavors of dysfunction, rather than ensuring effective governance....
20 May, 2025
-
1 min read
Rittenhouse Square in Philadelphia.
Pennsylvania Taxpayers Foot $75M Bill for Primaries They Can’t Vote In
The estimated cost for Tuesday’s primary elections in Pennsylvania is around $75 million for state and local governments. It’s a large price tag, especially since it is being paid for by voters who are denied the right to participate....
20 May, 2025
-
3 min read