DC Judge Tosses Lawsuit Against Open Primaries, Ranked Choice Voting Ballot Measure

DC
Photo Credit: Maria Oswalt on Unsplash
Published: 31 Mar, 2024
Updated: 18 Jun, 2025
1 min read

Photo Credit: Maria Oswalt on Unsplash

 

A DC Superior Court tossed a lawsuit Thursday that attempted to block a ballot initiative that would open the District of Columbia's primary elections to independent voters and implement ranked choice voting in all city elections.

The lawsuit was filed by the DC Democratic Party in August not long after the DC Board of Elections unanimously said it was okay for the reform initiative, now known as Initiative 83, to appear on the 2024 ballot if it gets enough signatures.

Judge Carl E. Ross determined that the lawsuit was filed prematurely

Initiative 83, spearheaded by Make All Votes Count DC, would allow 16% of registered voters not affiliated with a political party to choose a party's ballot in the primary. This amounts to over 73,000 voters. 

Currently the city uses taxpayer-funded closed partisan primaries, which deny these voters a meaningful say in elections. With ranked choice voting added, the reform initiative takes a comprehensive approach to enacting better elections in the nation's capital.

Make All Votes Count DC needs to collect 30,000 signatures by July 8 to qualify for the November ballot. These signatures must be acquired from 5 of the city's 8 wards.

According to the campaign, it is now a third of the way to that goal

IVP Donate

“Voters are enthusiastically in support of our effort to achieve ballot access,” says Kris Furnish, Field Director and Steering Committee member for the initiative's campaign.

“I’ve seen firsthand when petition circulators mention ‘ranked choice voting,’ voters stop in their tracks, immediately turn around, and ask to sign the petition.”

The earliest the reforms would be implemented in city elections is 2026. This not only comes down to Initiative 83 being approved by voters, but any potential funding requirements being appropriated by the DC City Council.

Related articles

Oklahoma State Capitol Building.
Lawsuit Slams Oklahoma Law as ‘Unconstitutional Sabotage’ of Open Primaries
Two Oklahoma veterans – one a pediatrician, the other a U.S. Coast Guard commander – have filed a legal challenge to SB 1027 in Oklahoma, a law they say unconstitutionally targets their statewide citizen initiative to implement open primaries, State Question 836 (SQ 836)....
08 Jul, 2025
-
5 min read
Crowd in Time Square.
NYC Exit Survey: 96% of Voters Understood Their Ranked Choice Ballots
An exit poll conducted by SurveyUSA on behalf of the nonprofit better elections group FairVote finds that ranked choice voting (RCV) continues to be supported by a vast majority of voters who find it simple, fair, and easy to use. The findings come in the wake of the city’s third use of RCV in its June 2025 primary elections....
01 Jul, 2025
-
6 min read
A man filling out his election ballot.
Oregon Activist Sues over Closed Primaries: 'I Shouldn't Have to Join a Party to Have a Voice'
A new lawsuit filed in Oregon challenges the constitutionality of the state’s closed primary system, which denies the state’s largest registered voting bloc – independent voters – access to taxpayer-funded primary elections. The suit alleges Oregon is denying the voters equal voting rights...
01 Jul, 2025
-
3 min read

Latest articles

Tyson points at Trump with a marijuana leaf behind him.
Mike Tyson Calls Out Donald Trump to Make Good on Cannabis Rescheduling Promise
Mike Tyson, the former heavyweight boxing champion known as “Iron Mike,” is calling on President Donald Trump to make good on a campaign promise to reclassify cannabis under federal law....
11 Jul, 2025
-
2 min read
Football in grass.
Texas, Football, Bobcats, Pac-12, and a Corrections Officer Who Performed a Miracle
Houston Chronicle and Hearst Newspapers Spotlight Kelly Damphousse, a Former Correctional Officer Who Transformed a University....
10 Jul, 2025
-
4 min read
Lorena Gonzalez with teamsters
Lorena Gonzalez, California’s Top Labor Leader, Blasts ‘Anti-Labor Left’ Over Abundance Movement
Lorena Gonzalez, one of California’s most influential labor leaders, entered the fray this week in a growing Democratic debate over the so-called “abundance” movement. ...
09 Jul, 2025
-
2 min read