| Action | RCV Batch Elimination Amendments |
| Stage | Final |
| Comment Period | Ended on 7/1/2026 |
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I am strongly opposed to adopting Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) in Virginia.
In 2021, Virginia Republicans used Ranked Choice Voting to nominate candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and Attorney General. I served first as a teller at a voting location and then spent the next three days in Richmond counting ballots. That experience gave me a firsthand look at one of RCV's most serious and persistent challenges: many voters simply did not understand how to complete the ballot correctly.
We encountered numerous ballots filled out incorrectly, including:
These errors were not isolated incidents. They demonstrated that even highly motivated voters participating in a party nominating convention — people who had actively sought out the process — struggled to understand basic ranking mechanics. A statewide general election would involve millions of voters with far more varied levels of civic experience, making the problem significantly worse, not better.
In the weeks before the convention, there were also numerous articles and discussions about how voters could "game" the system through strategic ranking. Whether or not those strategies materially influenced the outcome, they added a layer of complexity that no legitimate election system should require voters to navigate. Elections should reward civic participation, not strategic sophistication.
Beyond my direct experience, adopting RCV statewide would introduce serious additional concerns:
Our elections should prioritize simplicity, transparency, and equal treatment of every vote. Virginia's current system — one person, one vote, one choice per office — is straightforward to execute, easy to understand, fast to tabulate, and ensures every valid vote is counted equally in every round.
For these reasons, I urge the Board to retain Virginia's current voting method and reject the adoption of Ranked Choice Voting.