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Working Families Party gaming the NYC’s ranked-choice voting system and public campaign finance law

The Working Families Party is subverting democracy by gaming the city’s ranked-choice voting system.

Last weekend, the WFP endorsed four Democrats — Adrienne Adams, Brad Lander, Zohran Mamdani and Zellnor Myrie — in the ranked-choice primary for mayor.

The idea is to get voters to not rank Andrew Cuomo, Scott Stringer, Jessica Ramos, or any other less fanatically left candidate, in hopes that a WFP pick will wind up sneaking into a majority by the final ranked-choice count.

The Working Families Party has endorsed Adrienne Adams in a ranked-choice primary for mayor. LP Media
Zohran Mamdani is another candidate who was endorsed by the WFP. LP Media

The fact is, the ranked-choice “reform” favors such insider games, despite being promoted as empowering regular voters and promoting friendlier campaigns (i.e., less mud-slinging).

The WFP is no stranger to gaming the system; it narrowly escaped criminal prosecution a decade ago over a scam involving Data and Field Services, its for-profit campaign arm, which end-ran campaign finance law by charging WFP candidates below-market prices for campaign services. 

The WFP’s third endorsed candidate was Brad Lander. LP Media
The fourth candidate the WFP endorsed for the race for mayor is Zellnor Myrie. LP Media
The Working Families Party is subverting democracy by gaming the city’s ranked-choice voting system, critics say. Christopher Sadowski

Fact is, the city’s campaign finance system — with its ridiculous 8-to-1 match — also favors organized insiders like the WFP, as well as fanatic ideologues like the Democratic Socialists of America: Witness how Mamdani became the first to max out on primary fundraising.

It’s too late to undo any of this “progress” this year, but the next mayor should take a serious look at having a Charter Reform Commission ask the voters about unwinding “reforms” that only make city politics sicker.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

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