Quarterly Journal of Political Science > Vol 20 > Issue 3

The Effects of Ranked Choice Voting on Substantive Representation

Arjun Vishwanath, Department of Political Science, Boston University, USA, avishwan@bu.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Arjun Vishwanath (2025), "The Effects of Ranked Choice Voting on Substantive Representation", Quarterly Journal of Political Science: Vol. 20: No. 3, pp 409-437. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/100.00023123

Publication Date: 18 Jun 2025
© 2025 A. Vishwanath
 
Subjects
Electoral institutions,  Legislatures,  Political economy,  Public policy,  Representation,  Urban politics
 
Keywords
Representationelectoral institutionslocal politicspolitical economypublic policy
 

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In this article:
Why RCV Might Affect Representation 
Conceptualizing the Outcomes of Interest 
Identification of Treatment Effects 
Operationalizing the Quantities of Interest 
Fiscal Policy and Representation 
City Council Ideology and Representation 
Testing Within-Legislator Adaptation Post-RCV 
Heterogeneity and Generalizability 
Conclusion 
Acknowledgments 
References 

Abstract

Ranked choice voting (RCV) is an increasingly popular electoral institution that has been posited by reformers and media outlets to produce transformative effects on electoral outcomes and representation. However, there is little social scientific evidence available that evaluates these claims. I test the effects of RCV on municipal fiscal outcomes and the ideological composition of city councils. I also estimate RCV's effects on these outcomes relative to public opinion — in other words, whether RCV narrows the gap between outcomes and mass policy preferences. This article finds no empirical support for the proposition that RCV changed fiscal outcomes or the ideological composition of city councils — both on absolute terms and relative to mass opinion. Furthermore, the roll-call based ideal points of legislators serving before and after RCV did not change, and the relationship between city district opinion and city legislator ideology is unchanged post-adoption. Taken as a whole, this article does not find evidence that RCV has produced the types of transformative political effects that reformers have postulated.

DOI:10.1561/100.00023123

Online Appendix | 100.00023123_app.pdf

This is the article's accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/100.00023123_app

Replication Data | 100.00023123_supp.zip (ZIP).

This file contains the data that is required to replicate the data on your own system.

DOI: 10.1561/100.00023123_supp