Secretary of State Matt Dunlap told legislative leaders Thursday that a provision in election laws that the people’s veto petition blocked means ranked choice voting cannot be used in the June primaries.

Lawyers in the Attorney General’s office have found the people’s veto legislation has an inadvertent result, just the opposite of want ranked-choice supporters wanted.





“The people’s veto then stops committee amendment B from going forward, which takes you back to the original law which says primaries are determined by plurality,” he said.

[How Maine’s elections czar plans to make ranked-choice voting work]

The bottom line, according to Dunlap, is ranked-choice voting can’t occur in June without legislative action, which in unlikely since it would need a two-thirds vote, or if a court rules differently. Dunlap says he needs a definitive answer by next week to print ballots to meet federal requirements for overseas voting.

“We need clarity probably by Monday morning,” he said. “We have to get ballots printed, that’s the bottom line. We have an election to run. So, the philosophy of ranked choice voting, which is incredibly innovative and visionary, also has to comply with the statue.”

This article appears through a media partnership with Maine Public.

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