The Minnesota Supreme Court will take a speedier look at the legal challenge to instant-runoff voting in Minneapolis.
State's high court to expedite appeal on instant-runoff voting
The court said it will grant an expedited review of the challenge, bypassing the state Court of Appeals, and it ordered a compressed schedule for submission of briefs. It also directed the city to tell when it needs a ruling in order to make a decision on which election format to use this fall.
Voters in 2006 approved the instant-runoff method, in which voters rank candidates by preference. The City Council adopted an ordinance last year to use the method starting in the Nov. 3 election, but the Minnesota Voters Alliance challenged its constitutionality. A Hennepin County District judge ruled against the alliance, granting a request by the city and instant-runoff voting advocates to dismiss the lawsuits. The alliance appealed.
The speed of the appeal is important because the city must decide in June whether to invoke a clause in the amendment that allows it to declare that it isn't ready to go ahead with the new method in 2009, reverting to the traditional winner-takes-all method.
STEVE BRANDT
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After the murder of George Floyd, the city felt unified behind new initiatives to prevent violence. Now it seems like no one can agree.