Bloomington residents will soon cast ballots to decide how they want to vote in the future for mayor and City Council.
The city has used ranked-choice voting in the past two elections, but in November voters will see a ballot question asking if they want to repeal that system.
Members of Residents for a Better Bloomington, the group leading the repeal effort, say the method is confusing and undermines voters’ faith in the system.
“It’s an election integrity issue,” said David Clark, the group’s co-founder.
Supporters, meanwhile, say the system gives voters more choices and reduces acrimony in politics.
“There isn’t really any reason to repeal ranked-choice voting,” said Laura Calbone, with Vote No On Repeal, a group supported by FairVote Minnesota, which advocates for the system across the state.
Bloomington is one of five Minnesota cities that use ranked-choice voting to determine the winners of local elections, and residents continue to passionately debate the system’s merits. Ranked-choice voting replaces an old system where candidates would face off first in a primary election, and the winners would then compete in a general election. Instead, voters cast their ballots once and rank their choices.
Top Bloomington city staff say they’re not taking a stance on which method the city should use.