{"id":93093,"date":"2022-11-21T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-11-22T07:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/ranked-choice-winners-to-be-revealed-wednesday\/"},"modified":"2022-11-23T09:22:41","modified_gmt":"2022-11-23T18:22:41","slug":"ranked-choice-winners-to-be-revealed-wednesday","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/ranked-choice-winners-to-be-revealed-wednesday\/","title":{"rendered":"Ranked choice winners to be revealed Wednesday"},"content":{"rendered":"
This story has been updated with the uncounted ballot total as of early Wednesday morning.<\/em><\/p>\n It’s mathematically possible Sarah Palin will be Alaska’s next U.S. Representative and Kelly Tshibaka will be the newest U.S. Senator after the state’s first ranked choice tally in a general election occurs Wednesday afternoon. But the math will have to be very strange indeed.<\/p>\n Palin, just for starters, needs everyone who voted for fellow Republican Nick Begich III to rank her second, even though only half did during a special election in August to temporarily fill the U.S. house seat. Tshibaka, a Donald Trump-backed conservative, essentially has to hope a lot of Democrats like her more than moderate Republican incumbent Lisa Murkowski.<\/p>\n Instead, much of the suspense will likely be in a handful of races that will determine who controls both chambers of the Alaska State Legislature when the state Division of Elections<\/a> conducts its so-called “instant runoffs” starting at 4 p.m. The process, which will be covered live by the Juneau Empire and broadcast on <\/a>KTOO<\/a>, will first report the final first-choice vote counts for all races and then conduct the ranked choice tallies for all races where no candidate has a majority.<\/p>\n The elections division will continue accepting absentee ballots mailed from outside the U.S until Wednesday and there are still ballots from U.S. addresses that had to be received by last Friday that remain to be counted, along with any remaining questioned and other outstanding ballots, said Tiffany Montemayor, a spokesperson for the division. As of 9 a.m. Wednesday there are 1,373 uncounted ballots in addition to the 264,994 already counted, with perhaps a relative additional handful that will be received when the final tallies begin.<\/p>\n The ranked choice process will begin with the two Congressional races (where both incumbents are expected to be short of a first-choice majority), then the governor’s race if necessary (although incumbent Mike Dunleavy, a Republican, appears as if he will barely exceed a majority), and finally the state legislative races where about 10 of the 59 seats may necessitate an instant runoff.<\/p>\n An indicator of how the process is likely to play out occurred during the special election Aug. 16 <\/a>to fill the U.S. House seat after the death of Don Young this spring, the first-ever instance of Alaska using the ranked choice system voters approved last year.<\/p>\n Democrat Mary Peltola got about 40% of the first-choice vote, Palin 31% and Begich 28%. Begich was thus eliminated in the first “instant runoff,” and the votes of people ranking a second choice added to the other candidates. Palin got about 50% of second-choice votes, Peltola 29% and 21% made no second choice. The result was Peltola prevailed by a final margin of 51.5% to Palin’s 48.5%.<\/p>\n This time the circumstances are far more favorable to Peltola, who acquired both a multi-million campaign account and worldwide fame after becoming the first Democrat from Alaska in about 50 years elected to the U.S. House as well as the first Alaska Native in Congress. Palin and Begich, whose vicious attacks on each other and denouncement of ranked choice voting apparently resulted in relatively low second-choice support for each other, both urged supporters to “rank the red” during the general election campaign — but Palin will still fall short even if she gets 100% of Begich’s votes if the results to date hold up.<\/p>\n