Minneapolis voters seemed to adjust to ranked-choice voting with relative ease on Tuesday, even if many didn't use all three choices the new voting method allows.
"They're more prepared than I expected them to be," Luanne Nyberg, chief election judge at King Park in south Minneapolis, said Tuesday morning. Turnout in her precinct was about half that of the last city election in 2005. Only two among the first 55 voters in her precinct made ballot errors. One voter caught her own, the ballot scanner caught the other, and both filled out fresh ballots.
"The voters by and large knew what to do upon entering," said Jeanne Massey, executive director of FairVote Minnesota, which advocated the change in voting approved by Minneapolitans in 2006. City interim election director Patrick O'Connor agreed that the changeover from traditional voting went well.
"I thought it would be more complicated than it was, but it went very smoothly," said Brad Berquist, a 25-year resident, while voting in the Lyn-Lake area. Some voters said that although they adjusted well, they were worried about others.
"There are always going to be people who don't understand 1, 2, 3 and A, B, C," said voter Valerie Powers.
The biggest foul-up of the day may have been that many DFLers didn't get the influential DFL sample ballot that lists endorsees of the city's dominant party. City DFL Chair Dan McConnell said his understanding was that a mailing house delivered the 70,000-copy mailing to Minneapolis postal officials rather than St. Paul, where the state party's mailing permit is.
Many voters didn't seem to be using all of their choice rankings, according to spot checks. "I never got to a third choice," said voter Dale Wiehoff of the King Field neighborhood. "I didn't know the candidates that well." Nevertheless, he said he liked his ranked-choice experience despite arriving at the polls skeptical about it.
Massey said some voters may not have used all their choices because its takes more competitive races to encourage that. She said that if a voter can cast a first ranking for a candidate without misgivings about weakening another candidate, that voter is less likely to use all the available choices. She said she'll look at more competitive races like the Fifth Ward council seat and the at-large Park Board seat to see if more voters hedge their bets with multiple rankings.