Montana Initiatives Add to Growing Demand for Fairer Primaries, More Choice in Elections

vote
Photo by Element5 Digital on Unsplash.
Published: 28 May, 2024
3 min read

Photo Credit: Element5 Digital / Unsplash

 

Montana may be on the verge of joining a growing movement across the country to give voters a fairer elections process that offers more choice and greater accountability. 

Montanans for Election Reform is currency in the process of collecting signatures for two ballot initiatives – Constitutional Initiative 126 (CI 126) and Constitutional Initiative 127 (CI 127).

CI 126 would require the state to use a nonpartisan top four primary system, modeled after the reform that passed in Alaska in November 2020. All candidates and voters, regardless of party, participate on a single ballot. The top four vote-getters move on to the general election.

“No more being forced to choose one party’s ballot or the other – every voter gets all of the same choices,” write Bruce Tutvedt and Ted Kronebusch of Montanans for Election Reform.

“The top four vote-getters would then advance to the general election, regardless of their party affiliation, giving more voters an opportunity to hear from more candidates throughout an entire election”

Tutvedt, a former Republican state senator, is chair of Montanans for Election Reform. Kronebusch is a small business owner and a former executive committee member of the Montana Republican Central Committee.

CI 127 would change the Montana Constitution to require general elections in most elections in the state to be decided by a majority. Currently, Montana is a plurality state, which means a candidate can win an election with less than 50% of the vote. 

IVP Donate

“[The initiative] stops candidates from sneaking through without gaining the support of the majority of voters in their district,” write Tutvedt and Kronebusch. They added that together the two initiatives “will better align our election systems with the will of” voters.

Montana is part of a growing number of states where voters are clamoring for nonpartisan primaries that advance the top 4 or 5 candidates to the general election. Nevada voters could adopt a Top 5 system in November.

Idaho voters could vote on a similar Top 4 system as well.

The initiatives in Nevada and Idaho follow a similar model adopted in Alaska, which uses ranked choice voting (RCV) in the general election to not only give voters the option to rank candidates in order of preference, but also determine a majority winner in elections. 

Recent polls in Chula Vista and San Diego, California, show that two-thirds of voters would support a nonpartisan primary system that advances more than two candidates and uses an alternative voting method like RCV to determine a winner.

It doesn’t matter if it is a “red state,” “blue state,” or “purple state,” voters agree that the current system isn’t working for them and they want a better way to elect public officials.

CI 127 leaves it open for the Montana Legislature to decide how majority outcomes in elections would be ensured. The subject of the initiative states:

“Amends the Montana Constitution to provide that elections for certain offices must be decided by majority vote as determined as provided by law rather than by a plurality or the largest amount of the votes. If it cannot be determined who received a majority of votes because two or more candidates are tied, then the winner of the election will be determined as provided by law.”

Let Us Vote : Sign Now!

RCV may be off the table. Montana lawmakers passed a law in 2023 that prohibited the use of the voting method statewide. A fifth of US states have passed RCV bans since 2022 in an attempt to counter the tremendous momentum behind  the reform. 

The odds of the same Montana Legislature changing its mind on RCV are slim, but there are other alternative voting methods that could be used to ensure majority winners and that voters can cast a ballot for their true preferences.

“We trust Montana voters to think for themselves. Montanans want to be able to vote for the person, not just the party. And we deserve more and better choices on the ballot in November,” write Tutvedt and Kronebusch.

Montanans for Election Reform need 60,359 valid signatures for each initiative to get them on the November ballot. The group has until June 21 to submit the signatures to county clerks.

You Might Also Like

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
Andy Moore
Nonpartisan Reformers Unite: NANR Summit Charts Bold Path for Election Reform in 2026
The National Association of Nonpartisan Reformers (NANR) held its 9th annual summit in Miami this week following a year of political chaos and partisan machinations that put power before representation, accountability, and fairness....
05 Dec, 2025
-
12 min read
The Games Politicians Play After Voters Pass Election Reforms
The Games Politicians Play After Voters Pass Election Reforms
As IVN’s Shawn Griffiths travels to Miami to share hard-earned intel at the National Association of Nonpartisan Reformers (NANR) conference, Chad and Cara focus on Washington, DC, where a 73 percent mandate for an open primary and ranked-choice voting is being slow-walked into something smaller and safer for the political class....
04 Dec, 2025
-
1 min read
Trump sitting in the oval office with a piece of paper with a cannabis leaf on his desk.
Is Trump About to Outflank Democrats on Cannabis? Progressives Sound the Alarm
As President Donald Trump signals renewed interest in reclassifying cannabis from a Schedule I drug to Schedule III, a policy goal long championed by liberals and libertarians, the reaction among some partisan progressive advocates is not celebration, but concern....
08 Dec, 2025
-
5 min read
Malibu, California.
From the Palisades to Simi Valley, Independent Voters Poised to Decide the Fight to Replace Jacqui Irwin
The coastline that defines California’s mythology begins here. From Malibu’s winding cliffs to the leafy streets of Brentwood and Bel Air, through Topanga Canyon and into the valleys of Calabasas, Agoura Hills, and Thousand Oaks, the 42nd Assembly District holds some of the most photographed, most coveted, and most challenged terrain in the state. ...
10 Dec, 2025
-
6 min read
Ranked choice voting
Ranked Choice for Every Voter? New Bill Would Transform Every Congressional Election by 2030
As voters brace for what is expected to be a chaotic and divisive midterm election cycle, U.S. Representatives Jamie Raskin (Md.), Don Beyer (Va.), and U.S. Senator Peter Welch (Vt.) have re-introduced legislation that would require ranked choice voting (RCV) for all congressional primaries and general elections beginning in 2030....
10 Dec, 2025
-
3 min read