Measure 117: Will Oregon Be the Next State to Adopt Ranked Choice Voting?

Your Choice
Photo by Alex Shuper on Unsplash+. Unsplash+ license obtained by author.
Published: 17 Oct, 2024
3 min read

Photo Credit: Alex Shuper / Unsplash

 

Two states currently use ranked choice voting (RCV) at the state level (Maine and Alaska). This number could substantially change in 2024 with RCV on the ballot in 4 states, including Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, and Oregon.

Oregon is the only state where the proposal on the ballot (Measure 117) is solely an RCV initiative. If approved by voters, here is what Measure 117 would do.

It would replace the current choose-one voting method used for primary and general elections in the state with RCV starting in the 2028 election cycle. This initiative is unique because it affects primary elections as well.

Measure 117 would also make Oregon the second state, followed by Maine, to use RCV in presidential elections, along with elections for US Senate and House and state executive offices. 

And, the measure would allow more local municipalities and election-based districts (like school districts) to adopt RCV's use as long as home rule charters do not forbid it.

Three jurisdictions in Oregon have already adopted RCV -- Benton County, Multnomah County, and the City of Portland. 

Despite all the ways Measure 117 expands the use of RCV, the most historic aspect of it is it is the first statewide RCV initiative to be added to the ballot by the state legislature.

IVP Donate

Oregon House Speaker Dan Rayfield said RCV "will give voters more choice, encourage voter engagement, and strengthen our democracy by improving peoples’ perception of elections and election outcomes."

RCV allows voters the option to rank candidates in order of preference (1st choice, 2nd choice, etc.) and if no candidate gets a majority of first choice selections, an instant runoff kicks in that eliminates the last place candidate.

The results then factor in the next choices of the voters who ranked the eliminated candidate as their top pick and additional rounds of elimination are held as needed until a single candidate has a majority vote. 

In the end, the results should reflect how voters would have cast their ballot if the eliminated candidates were not on the ballot from the start.

For the voter, the only thing they need to worry about is ranking candidates like they would rank anything else in their daily lives, whether it is favorite movies or preferred foods. 

Opponents of Measure 117 say the system in too complex for voters to understand. State Rep. E. Werner Reschke, for example, asks, "Why would we want to make the ballot even longer and more complicated with more choices?"

The confusion argument is common among RCV opponents but exit polling after voters have a chance to use it tend to show that most people find it simple -- though there is room for greater voter education efforts.

Some opponents to the measure say Oregon voters should hold off on implementing RCV's use at the state level until it has been tested. The Oregonian Editorial Board, for example, writes:

Let Us Vote : Sign Now!

"Oregonians should hold off until voters can see how Multnomah County implements ranked-choice voting on the local level, starting with Portland city races this November."

The paper adds, "Multnomah is the state’s largest county and can provide helpful insight on implementation.

Measure 117 is supported by the ACLU of Oregon, Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon, Common Cause Oregon, League of Women Voters of Oregon, Next Up Action Fund, Veterans for All Voters, RepresentUs, and FairVote Action.

In August, the "Yes on Measure 117" campaign announced endorsements from 75 different organizations. 

“We’ve built this campaign around the support of our communities along with Oregon’s leading advocacy groups who understand voters across the state are ready for change,” said campaign Communications Director Caroline Phillips.

“With our diverse coalition in the lead, we will move Oregon away from the current system of picking between the lesser of two evils. Measure 117 gives voters more choices and a better way to vote.”

ACLU of Oregon Senior Policy Associate Emily Hawley argues that allowing ballot ranking "encourages more participation in voting and means that [a citizen's] vote becomes more meaningful and impactful."

No polling is available for Measure 117. However, Oregon offers an interesting case study on what RCV success looks like when state lawmakers put it on the ballot as opposed to a citizen-led campaign.

More Choice for San Diego

You Might Also Like

USPS trucks parked next to each other.
2026 Will See an Increase in Rejected Mail-In Ballots -- Here's Why
While the media has kept people’s focus on the Epstein files, Venezuela, or a potential invasion of Greenland, the United States Postal Service adopted a new rule that will have a broad impact on Americans – especially in an election year in which millions of people will vote by mail....
09 Jan, 2026
-
9 min read
Missouri gerrymander
Missouri’s Gerrymander Faces a Citizen Veto, but State Officials Aren't Taking 'No' for an Answer
People Not Politicians (PNP) submitted over 305,000 signatures last week to freeze a congressional gerrymander passed by the Missouri Legislature in September. However, state officials are doing everything they can to pretend this citizen revolt isn’t happening....
19 Dec, 2025
-
12 min read
Trump mad over Indiana gerrymander decision.
Trump Big Mad that Indiana Republicans Won’t Fight His Gerrymandering War
Things looked like they could get even more chaotic this week in the mid-cycle gerrymandering arms race between the two major parties as the Indiana Senate took up a new congressional map to give Republicans an even greater electoral advantage in the state. But Indiana Senate Republicans this week put their foot down and declared that they want no part in this race to the bottom....
12 Dec, 2025
-
13 min read
The American River
Josh Hoover’s Test as a Moderate Republican: Can He Win Independent Voters Again?
The American River connects the cities of Folsom, Rancho Cordova, and Citrus Heights, forming the core of California’s 7th Assembly District, which also includes the unincorporated communities of McClellan Park, North Highlands, Foothill Farms, Fair Oaks, Orangevale, Gold River, Rosemont, Mather, and most of Carmichael. The district lies entirely within Sacramento County....
06 Jan, 2026
-
9 min read
hand putting ballot in box.
A Million Californians Sign On to Voter ID – Forcing a 2026 Ballot Fight
California Assemblymember Carl DeMaio’s Reform California, which has proposed amending the California Constitution with a voter ID ballot measure, says it has crossed a major threshold going into 2026 – and it is not slowing down....
05 Jan, 2026
-
3 min read
Tim Walz
With Tim Walz Out, Is Minnesota Ripe for The Next Jesse Ventura?
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a Democrat and Kamala Harris’s running mate in the 2024 presidential election that Donald J. Trump ultimately won, announced January 5 that he will not seek a third term in 2026. ...
05 Jan, 2026
-
2 min read