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#New York pols sue to delay new ranked-choice voting system

#New York pols sue to delay new ranked-choice voting system

Six city lawmakers are suing to block the Big Apple’s embattled Board of Elections from rolling out a new ranked-choice voting system next year, claiming officials have failed to prepare for the potentially confusing switchover.

The lawsuit is the latest salvo lobbed by mainstays of the Brooklyn Democratic Party against the new elections system, which will do away with the runoff elections that Gotham’s political machines have dominated for decades.

In the court papers filed late Tuesday, the half-dozen lawmakers and a slew of civil rights groups argue that BOE failed to provide a required report due in June showing it has prepared for the switchover and also failed to launch the required advertising campaign to educate voters about rank-choice voting.

They also claim that the federal Voting Rights Act should be invoked to prevent the changes but do not outline how rank-choice voting violates the landmark civil rights-era law.

The lawsuit was brought by Democratic Councilmen Adrienne Adams, Alicka Ampry-Samuel, Robert Cornegy, Laurie Cumbo, Farah Louis and Daneek Miller, who represent Brooklyn and Queens.

Their lead lawyer is Frank Carone, the one-time law partner of recently departed Brooklyn Democratic Party chairman Frank Seddio and a behind-the-scenes power broker in Kings County politics.

One powerful civil rights group, the NAACP’s New York chapter, signaled Wednesday that it plans to join the lawsuit.

“We didn’t understand the need for RCV,” longtime head Hazel Dukes told The Post. “We didn’t understand what it was all about. We’re also asking for a delay until voters get the education and the Board of Election is better prepared.”

A Board of Elections spokeswoman said she could not comment on pending litigation.

By a 3-to-1 margin, city voters overwhelmingly approved a charter amendment in 2019 that ordered the Board of Elections to switch to rank-choice voting for municipal elections by 2021.

The switch was the result of a years-long push by good-government groups, which say it will improve governance and participation by ending low-turnout runoff elections where party-backed candidates dominate.

Some civil rights activists supported the switch, too, arguing that rank-choice voting will bring more diversity to citywide offices, which remain dominated by white candidates in a city that is majority-minority.

“It is not just a white progressive idea as experience in cities like Oakland, Berkeley and Minneapolis — where black candidates have successfully run with RCV and diversified their city councils — makes clear,” said Bertha Lewis, a longtime organizer in African American neighborhoods.

However, several groups and politicians affiliated with the Democratic Party organizations in The Bronx, Queens and Brooklyn have mounted a fierce campaign in recent weeks to delay or nix the transition.

During the six-hour long showdown, Cumbo, the Council’s majority leader, slammed officials from the Board of Elections and the Campaign Finance Board for failing to do enough to educate voters about the changes — and before arguing the money could be better spent on providing food during the coronavirus pandemic.

“This is like the most political injustice ever,” exclaimed Cumbo. ” This is a political injustice to our population.”

 – Additional reporting by Priscilla DeGregory

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