Seattle Approves: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Prop 1a: hatnote link to Seattle Prop 1a and Prop 1b, and referring to "1a" and "1b" using lowercase letters)
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<< [[Pacific United States]]
<< [[Pacific United States]]


'''Seattle Approves''' is a 501(c)(4) organization founded in 2020 to bring [[approval voting]] to the city of Seattle. . The group was supports "Initiative 134" (also known as "Prop 1A"). As of 2022, it is the most active approval-voting activism group in [[Washington state]]. By 2022, the organization had received $208,000 of its $462,000 operating budget from [[Center for Election Science]].<ref>https://www.axios.com/local/seattle/2022/07/07/seattles-approval-voting-initiative-explained</ref>
'''Seattle Approves''' is a 501(c)(4) organization founded in 2020 to bring [[approval voting]] to the city of Seattle. . The group was supports "Initiative 134" (also known as "Prop 1a"). As of 2022, it is the most active approval-voting activism group in [[Washington state]]. By 2022, the organization had received $208,000 of its $462,000 operating budget from [[Center for Election Science]].<ref>https://www.axios.com/local/seattle/2022/07/07/seattles-approval-voting-initiative-explained</ref>


== Initiative 134 ==
== Initiative 134 ==
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As proposed in Initiative 134, there would be an open primary with candidates from all parties and independent candidates on a single ballot. Votes could choose however many candidates they choose approve of. The top two candidates receiving the most votes would advance to the general election.
As proposed in Initiative 134, there would be an open primary with candidates from all parties and independent candidates on a single ballot. Votes could choose however many candidates they choose approve of. The top two candidates receiving the most votes would advance to the general election.


== Prop 1A ==
== Prop 1a ==
{{main|Seattle Prop 1a and Prop 1b}}

Before Initiative 134 was put on the ballot to be approved by voters, the Seattle City Council added another option for voters to consider.
Before Initiative 134 was put on the ballot to be approved by voters, the Seattle City Council added another option for voters to consider.


* Prop 1A &mdash; Implement Initiative 134 (approval voting) as described above.
*Prop 1a &mdash; Implement Initiative 134 (approval voting) as described above.
* Prop 1B &mdash; this proposition calls for the same offices (mayor, city attorney, council members) to be selected by [[ranked-choice voting]] in the primary election, advancing the top two candidates in the ranked-choice election to the general election.
*Prop 1b &mdash; this proposition calls for the same offices (mayor, city attorney, council members) to be selected by [[ranked-choice voting]] in the primary election, advancing the top two candidates in the ranked-choice election to the general election.
==Links==

*'''Website''': https://seattleapproves.org

*'''Facebook''':
== Links ==
**https://www.facebook.com/seattleapproves
* '''Website''': https://seattleapproves.org
**https://www.facebook.com/groups/641903813085623/
* '''Facebook''':
** https://www.facebook.com/seattleapproves
** https://www.facebook.com/groups/641903813085623/

=== References ===
<references/>


===References===
<references />


[[Category:Advocacy]]
[[Category:Advocacy]]

Revision as of 06:03, 21 October 2022

<< The Center for Election Science
<< Pacific United States

Seattle Approves is a 501(c)(4) organization founded in 2020 to bring approval voting to the city of Seattle. . The group was supports "Initiative 134" (also known as "Prop 1a"). As of 2022, it is the most active approval-voting activism group in Washington state. By 2022, the organization had received $208,000 of its $462,000 operating budget from Center for Election Science.[1]

Initiative 134

Initiative 134 calls for the Mayor, City Attorney, and each district governed by the City Council to be selected by approval voting. Seattle Approves was successfully able to gather enough signatures to put "Initiative 134" on the ballot.

As proposed in Initiative 134, there would be an open primary with candidates from all parties and independent candidates on a single ballot. Votes could choose however many candidates they choose approve of. The top two candidates receiving the most votes would advance to the general election.

Prop 1a

Before Initiative 134 was put on the ballot to be approved by voters, the Seattle City Council added another option for voters to consider.

  • Prop 1a — Implement Initiative 134 (approval voting) as described above.
  • Prop 1b — this proposition calls for the same offices (mayor, city attorney, council members) to be selected by ranked-choice voting in the primary election, advancing the top two candidates in the ranked-choice election to the general election.

Links

References