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Murkowski trolls Alaska Senate challenger as she takes lead in first-place votes


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Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) trolled her opponent, Republican Kelly Tshibaka, after she took a lead in the first-place votes for the state’s Senate race. 

 

Alaska’s ranked-choice voting system means voters ranked the candidates from first place to last, and a candidate must win a majority of first-place votes to win outright without additional rounds being needed.

 

While no candidate is projected to win a majority of first-place votes in the first round, Tshibaka led Murkowski narrowly since Election Day, but Murkowski took a lead and noted it in a tweet on her campaign account Friday. 

 

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/3742812-murkowski-trolls-alaska-senate-challenger-as-she-takes-lead-in-first-place-votes/

the-hill-web-logo - Ripple Strategies

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Murkowski, Peltola and Dunleavy projected to win Alaska elections

All three incumbents likely clinched final victory in Alaska’s statewide elections Friday, as the Alaska Division of Elections updated results with thousands of additional absentee, questioned and early ballots from this fall’s general election.

Final unofficial results will not be available until 4 p.m. Wednesday, when the division implements the state’s new ranked choice sorting system, but voting trends have made the results clear in most races.

https://www.ktoo.org/2022/11/19/murkowski-peltola-and-dunleavy-projected-to-win-alaska-elections/

 

Not so long ago the headline would have read "Palin projected to lose Alaska election" Clearly, she has become irrelevant. And Alaska looks like it will have a Democratic congresswoman.

Edited by placeholder
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31 minutes ago, thaibeachlovers said:

I thought states had primaries to select the candidates in the election. Am I wrong, or is Alaska different?

Not primaries, these were Statewide Elections the US over. The Primaries were last Febrauary or March.

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20 hours ago, thaibeachlovers said:

I thought states had primaries to select the candidates in the election. Am I wrong, or is Alaska different?

The article mentions that the Alaska election is ranked choice. This allows several candidates from the same party to face a general election. Unfortunately, the lack of such a system is how Trump won his primary with less than 40% of the Republican primary vote.

Edited by ozimoron
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1 hour ago, thaibeachlovers said:

I don't understand why it seems that 2 GOP candidates are in a competition then. If they are not competing, why does the article say one is ahead of the other?

It's the way Alaska runs there system. You need to research Alaska voting.

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8 minutes ago, thaibeachlovers said:

I did but ended up confused, which is why I asked.

It is an all for one type of system, regardless of affiliation. It is based upon votes and if one does not have enough, regardless of affiliation, then the top vote getters move on from the primary for it to be sussed out again and is why two Republicans are vying for the same seat.

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2022-election/alaska-senate-race-headed-ranked-choice-runoff-rcna54939

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/why-republicans-moderates-see-opportunity-ranked-choice-voting-n1286250

Edited by ThailandRyan
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12 minutes ago, ThailandRyan said:

It is an all for one type of system, regardless of affiliation. It is based upon votes and if one does not have enough, regardless of affiliation, then the top vote getters move on from the primary for it to be sussed out again and is why two Republicans are vying for the same seat.

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2022-election/alaska-senate-race-headed-ranked-choice-runoff-rcna54939

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/why-republicans-moderates-see-opportunity-ranked-choice-voting-n1286250

Thank you for explaining it.

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