Fed Court to Hear IRV Lawsuit on Thursday
On Thursday, a federal judge will give the first public airing of . Part of the hearing should determine whether the court will accept the submitted by the Political Reform Program.
, the lawsuit unbelievably asserts that San Francisco鈥檚 Ranked Choice Voting system鈥攚hich allows voters to vote for three candidates at a time鈥攊s somehow constitutionally defective because it doesn鈥檛 give voters enough choices.
Our Amicus brief rather pointedly challenges this absurd contention and carefully deconstructs the plaintiffs鈥 case. Not only do the plaintiffs have a rather heavy burden to bear鈥攃ourts don鈥檛 lightly toss aside either voter-approved initiatives or proven electoral methods鈥攂ut two state supreme courts have tossed out nearly identical challenges. In lay terms let鈥檚 say this: the plaintiffs are skating on thin ice. On a warm day.
Complicating matters for the proponents of this left-field long-shot is the fact that they have built their case around the Declaration of an 鈥渆xpert鈥 who has proven鈥攊n a rather embarrassingly public fashion鈥攖o know almost nothing about the realities of San Francisco elections. A true expert on San Francisco politics, Richard DeLeon, Professor Emeritus at San Francisco State University and author of Left Coast City, deemed the Declaration submitted by the plaintiffs鈥 expert to be 鈥渂ased on a superficial analysis of inadequate and incomplete data leading to conclusions that are highly questionable, misleading, and untrustworthy.鈥
Federal District Court Judge Richard Seeborg will hear the case on April Fools鈥 Day. 鈥榥uff said.