STAR Voting:
⭐️ Prevents vote-splitting and makes it safe to vote your conscience.
⭐️ One Person, One Vote: Elects majority-preferred winners whenever possible.
⭐️ Endorsed by organizations and leaders throughout Oregon.
⭐️ Levels the playing field, empowering disenfranchised voters.
⭐️ Is vetted and peer-reviewed, topping the charts in all studies of accuracy and representativeness.
★ INSTRUCTIONS: Voters score candidates from 0 up to 5 stars.
★ COUNTING: STAR stands for Score Then Automatic Runoff, and that's exactly how it works.
Scoring Round: The two highest scoring candidates overall are finalists.
Automatic Runoff: The runoff is classic one person one vote; Your ballot already shows your preferences and your full vote automatically goes to the finalist you prefer.
★ WINNER: The finalist with the most votes wins!
Watch the How Does STAR Voting Work video
Voting reform is the keystone. A single cause with the potential to empower us to be more effective on every other issue we care about.
Honesty is the best strategy. Strategic voting is not incentivized.
Even if your favorite can’t win, your vote helps prevent your worst case scenario.
Highly accurate, no matter how many candidates/parties are in the race.
No parties, candidates, or voters are excluded. Doesn't give anyone an unfair advantage.
Fully constitutional in Oregon, and around the country. This is a nationally viable proposal.
Streamlines the electoral process and saves money over time for both candidates and taxpayers.
Resources:
More information on STAR Voting.
Featured articles on STAR Voting.
Read the peer review on STAR Voting.
Featured videos on STAR Voting.
STAR Voting was invented following the 2014 Equal Vote Conference on voting reform. The goal was to find a proposal that could go further to deliver on the talking points of Ranked Choice while addressing known issues with the older system. It quickly topped the charts in every study that included it.
How does Ranked Choice work?
Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) and STAR Voting have a lot in common: Both are more expressive and encourage more positive campaigns. With both, only one election is needed in many cases. Both can be used for single winner, multi-winner, or proportional representation elections … that said, there are significant differences:
Change can be scary. If we are going to put in the work to educate voters and adopt a whole new voting method we owe it to voters to get it right.
Learn more about STAR Voting and Ranked Choice.
Read the peer review on STAR Voting and RCV.
Learn more about electoral science and voting reform from the Equal Vote Coalition.