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Ranked-Choice Voting (RCV), often marketed as a “fairer” alternative to traditional elections, actually erodes core principles of American democracy in several serious ways. Here’s how, from a common sense perspective:
1. Violates “One Person, One Vote”
In a normal election, every voter gets exactly one vote, and the candidate with the most votes wins—simple, transparent, and equal. RCV lets some voters’ ballots count multiple times through the instant-runoff process. If your first-choice candidate is eliminated, your second (or third, or fourth) choice gets promoted to a full vote. That means voters who picked fringe or losing candidates effectively get extra bites at the apple, while voters whose first choice actually had broad support only get counted once. That’s not equality; it’s vote inflation for the losers.
2. Creates Confusion and Disenfranchisement
RCV ballots are notoriously complicated. Voters have to rank candidates they may know nothing about, and a single mistake (over-votes, under-votes, or ranking errors) can get your entire ballot “exhausted” and thrown out. In real-world examples—like Alaska’s 2022 special election and New York City’s 2021 Democratic mayoral primary—hundreds of thousands of ballots were discarded because voters couldn’t navigate the system. Who does this hurt most? Lower-income, less-educated, elderly, and minority voters. In practice, RCV suppresses turnout and silences the working class.
3. Empowers the Political Class and Weakens Majority Rule
Under traditional voting, a candidate usually needs 50% + 1 to claim a legitimate mandate. RCV routinely elects “winners” with far less than a true majority once exhausted ballots are removed. In Maine’s 2018 2nd District race, Bruce Poliquin led on Election Night with 46.3%, but after redistribution, Jared Golden “won” with 50.6%—even though over 8,000 ballots were exhausted and never counted in the final tally. The real majority of voters who showed up either voted for someone else or couldn’t complete the process. That’s not majority rule; it’s statistical manipulation dressed up as consensus.
4. Benefits Extremists and Spoilers, Then Hides Them
Some people love to say RCV eliminates the “spoiler effect,” but it actually encourages fringe candidates to run, knowing their voters’ second-choice votes will flow somewhere—usually to the left. Moderate and conservative voters, by contrast, tend to consolidate early behind viable candidates and don’t get the same second-chance boost. The system quietly launders radical votes into mainstream outcomes without voters realizing they just elected someone their neighbor never would have supported in a head-to-head race.
5. Opens the Door to Fraud and Manipulation
Because RCV requires centralized tabulation and multiple rounds of algorithmic redistribution, it’s far harder to audit than a simple plurality count. A few thousand ballots “exhausted” here, a software glitch there, or a conveniently high error rate in certain precincts can flip an entire election with no paper trail most citizens can follow. The more complex the system, the easier it is for bureaucrats and activists to game it.
In short, ranked-choice voting replaces the clear, equal, majority-driven system the Founders designed with an opaque, exhausting, elite-managed process that routinely produces winners most voters never actually chose. It’s not reform—it’s a progressive power grab disguised as “making every vote count.”
Real democracy is simple: one person, one vote, highest total wins. Anything else is a subversion.

Just two years after Mayor Jason Beck came up with the framework for Amkor’s home, the Peoria Innovation Core (PIC), the company’s groundbreaking officially marks the start of a $7 billion investment in Peoria for a flagship testing and packaging facility that will help bring jobs to the city and spike economic development for future businesses to come…. “This is the change that Peoria needed. This is 3,000 to 4,000 jobs. This is the future of what we’re going to have for, not only Peoria, but for the northwest Valley”……click here for more

The AZ529 Education Savings Plan offers a tax-free approach to setting money aside for college, community college, vocational training, trade school and other educational avenues for high school graduates. Arizona residents can receive a dollar-for-dollar state tax deduction for contributions made to an AZ529 account each year, of up to $2,000 per beneficiary or $4,000 per beneficiary, depending on filing status. Funds earned over time will remain tax-free when used for a wide variety of covered educational expenses. Additionally, 529 plan beneficiaries can now rollover unused funds into a Roth IRA, up to a $35,000 lifetime limit free of income tax or tax penalties. Friends and family members may also add to a child’s AZ529 Plan at any time and earn the same tax benefits for themselves.
Click here to learn more https://www.aztreasury.gov/_files/ugd/8bb536_550c914f2b0f497c9d1f34593f2038e1.pdf

H.R. 5371, enacted November 12, 2025, ended the 43-day partial government shutdown by extending FY2025 funding levels for most federal agencies through January 30, 2026. It provided full-year FY2026 appropriations for three bills (Agriculture/FDA, Legislative Branch, and Military Construction/VA) and included back pay for affected federal employees, reversal of shutdown-related staff reductions, and resumption of blocked services such as SNAP payments.
Major Democratic Requests Not Included in the Final Bill
These items were excluded in line with the Republican-led Congress’s stated goal of eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse in federal entitlement and assistance programs, while keeping the continuing resolution narrowly focused on reopening government operations. The omitted provisions were deferred for separate legislative consideration.
We will be “Eyes On” as these omitted provisions come up again in 2026.
Real Solutions for Real Families

2025-2026 School Year: July 31, 2025- May 21, 2026
Ages: Kindergarteners – Age 14
Hours: AM Program: 6 a.m. – school opening | PM Program: School release – 6 p.m.
Location: All 21 Peoria Unified School District elementary schools located in Peoria
Alta Loma, Apache, Cheyenne, Cotton Boll, Country Meadows, Coyote Hills, Desert Harbor,
Ira Murphy, Lake Pleasant, Oakwood, Oasis, Parkridge, Paseo Verde, Peoria, Santa Fe,
Sky View, Sundance, Sunset Heights, Sun Valley, Vistancia and Zuni Hills
Meals: AM program attendance includes breakfast, PM attendance includes a snack.
Programs operate from 6:00 a.m. to the start of school (AM) and from school dismissal (PM) until 6:00 p.m. on all scheduled Peoria Unified School Days.
If you are in need of financial assistance the AM/PM program contracts with DES and accepts subsidized funding.