‘Would hurt us’: CLE Heights decides not to put rank choice voting on the ballot

For months now, following a charter review commission recommendation, Cleveland Heights has weighed whether to allow its voters the option of ranking candidates at the poll both.

Instead of making a single choice, ranked-choice voting allows voters to rank candidates in order of preference. Whoever receives more than 50% of the votes would win.

As Lakewood and CLE Heights decide on ranked-choice voting, lawmakers decide to ban it. Why?

RELATED:As Lakewood and CLE Heights decide on ranked-choice voting, lawmakers decide to ban it. Why?

Cleveland Heights City Council has decided not to move forward with it, though…

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