Co-Sponsorship Memo Details

2023-2024 Regular Session
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Primary Runoff Election
May 17, 2023 10:18 AM to All Senate Members
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Photo of Senator Senator Ryan Aument
Senator Ryan Aument
R Senate District 36
Along With
Photo of Senator Sen. Frank Farry
Sen. Frank Farry
R Senate District 6
Memo
In the near future we intend to introduce legislation to ensure that candidates that win their primary election are supported by at least half of primary voters.
 
In recent years we have seen a number of primary elections that attract a large number of candidates.  In large, competitive primaries, a candidate can win with the support of only a small fraction of voters.  This leads to voters feeling dissatisfied and unrepresented in general elections, especially in areas where there is one-party dominance, and the winner of the dominant party primary election is almost always the winner of the general election.  In all scenarios, the winner of a primary election should emerge as a clear consensus pick of that party and this legislation is a step towards that goal.
 
A runoff election system creates a possibility for a second primary election: if no candidate receives at least 50% of the vote in a primary election, then a second, or runoff, election is held between the top two candidates. Under our proposal, the candidates with the most votes in the runoff election would be declared the winner.  To be clear, this proposal would only apply to primary elections.
 
Currently, ten states require a runoff in primary elections if candidates do not win with a certain required threshold for victory: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, and Vermont.
 
Please join us in sponsoring this legislation to ensure primary election winners are supported by at least half of primary voters.
 
Legislation
Document
This document was not submitted for introduction.
Last updated on May 17, 2023 10:20 AM
Primary Runoff Election
May 17, 2023 10:18 AM to All Senate Members

Circulated By
AUMENT and FARRY

Memo
In the near future we intend to introduce legislation to ensure that candidates that win their primary election are supported by at least half of primary voters.
 
In recent years we have seen a number of primary elections that attract a large number of candidates.  In large, competitive primaries, a candidate can win with the support of only a small fraction of voters.  This leads to voters feeling dissatisfied and unrepresented in general elections, especially in areas where there is one-party dominance, and the winner of the dominant party primary election is almost always the winner of the general election.  In all scenarios, the winner of a primary election should emerge as a clear consensus pick of that party and this legislation is a step towards that goal.
 
A runoff election system creates a possibility for a second primary election: if no candidate receives at least 50% of the vote in a primary election, then a second, or runoff, election is held between the top two candidates. Under our proposal, the candidates with the most votes in the runoff election would be declared the winner.  To be clear, this proposal would only apply to primary elections.
 
Currently, ten states require a runoff in primary elections if candidates do not win with a certain required threshold for victory: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, and Vermont.
 
Please join us in sponsoring this legislation to ensure primary election winners are supported by at least half of primary voters.
 

Document
This document was not submitted for introduction.

Last Updated
May 17, 2023 10:20 AM
Generated 03/24/2025 02:20 AM