{
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  "path": "/2026/02/can-ranked-choice-voting-save-albuquerque-a-fortune-supporters-will-try-again-for-next-city-election/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-02-25T23:46:06.000Z",
  "site": "https://abq.news",
  "tags": [
    "Albuquerque",
    "City Desk ABQ",
    "Elections & Politics",
    "Local Government",
    "Can ranked choice voting save Albuquerque a fortune? Supporters will try again for next city election",
    "The Paper."
  ],
  "textContent": "The Albuquerque City Council uses ranked choice voting (RCV) for its own internal seats. Now, Councilors Tammy Fiebelkorn, Nichole Rogers and Stephanie Telles have introduced Ordinance O-26-13 to extend that same system to citywide elections by November 2027. Under RCV, voters rank candidates by preference. If no one secures a majority, the lowest vote-getter is […]\n\nThe post Can ranked choice voting save Albuquerque a fortune? Supporters will try again for next city election appeared first on The Paper..",
  "title": "Can ranked choice voting save Albuquerque a fortune? Supporters will try again for next city election"
}