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With Ranked-Choice Voting, Some Hope, But a Lot of Concern

May 27, 2026

Washington D.C. is implementing ranked-choice voting for its June 16 primary election, allowing voters to rank up to five candidates per race, with winners needing over 50% support through multiple elimination rounds if necessary. While proponents argue this system encourages broader voter representation and gives grassroots candidates better chances, critics including longtime residents and community organizers worry the six-month implementation timeline is insufficient compared to other cities' multi-year rollouts. Concerns center on voter confusion, particularly among seniors, and whether inadequate education could suppress turnout and produce illegitimate winners.

Who is affected

  • D.C. voters, particularly seniors and residents of Wards 7 and 8 east of the Anacostia River
  • Non-party/independent voters like Damon Jones who previously couldn't participate in Democratic primaries
  • Returning citizens concerned about their political power
  • Mayoral candidates including Janeese Lewis George and Kenyan McDuffie
  • D.C. Council candidates in at-large and ward races (Kevin B. Chavous, Elissa Silverman, Jacque Patterson, Doni Crawford, Greg Jackson, Lisa Raymond, among others)
  • D.C. Delegate candidates including Trent Holbrook and Brooke Pinto
  • Community organizations including Million Man Vote, ElectED DC, Make All Votes Count DC, and Staying Connected DC Family Services
  • D.C. Board of Elections staff and 2,000 trained election workers
  • Sandra Seegars, Ambrose Lane Jr., China Dickerson, and other community activists

What action is being taken

  • The D.C. Board of Elections is conducting information sessions before advisory neighborhood commissions, town halls, webinars, and public meetings
  • DCBOE has trained 2,000 election workers for deployment during early voting and Election Day
  • DCBOE's voter outreach team is setting up presentations, many by Zoom and some in person with voting machines
  • Mail-in ballots are already in circulation
  • ElectED DC members are knocking on doors and engaging voters in hands-on activities to acclimate them to ranked-choice voting
  • ElectED DC has launched a civic match app for users to find aligned candidates
  • Candidates are forming cross-endorsement coalitions (Brown and Trindade; Patterson and Crawford; various others)
  • Community members are using social media to demonstrate proper completion of mail-in ballots
  • Damon Jones is working through Staying Connected DC Family Services to make ranked-choice voting more digestible
  • Million Man Vote has been interviewing mayoral, congressional, and council candidates throughout the election season

Why it matters

  • This represents a fundamental shift in how D.C. elections determine winners, moving from plurality voting where candidates could win with under 20-24% of votes to a system requiring majority support. The change affects democratic legitimacy and representation, particularly for marginalized communities in Wards 7 and 8 where advocates see both opportunity for authentic community representation and risk of voter disenfranchisement through confusion. The implementation raises questions about whether rushed adoption (six months versus New York City's two-year rollout) could suppress turnout among seniors and other populations, potentially producing winners who benefit from invalidated ballots rather than genuine support. The system also impacts power dynamics by potentially benefiting grassroots candidates without machine backing or massive funding, while creating new strategic considerations through cross-endorsements that could reshape D.C.'s political landscape.

What's next

  • Early voting starts June 8
  • Ambrose Lane Jr. is scheduled to reveal his rankings on June 1
  • DCBOE will count already-received mail-in ballots by primary day (June 16), with results posted shortly after the District's 75 voting precincts close
  • DCBOE has 10 days after the primary (until June 26) to receive mail-in ballots and fully conduct tabulation of votes
  • Results will be certified by July 15
  • DCBOE will make audit findings available on its website after certification
  • A report is anticipated showing a nine-year life expectancy gap between men east of the Anacostia River and men west of Rock Creek Park (release timing: less than a month before primaries)

Read full article from source: The Washington Informer