- Worcester State University News - https://news.worcester.edu -

Annual Constitution Day Debate Will Address Ranked-Choice Voting

An online, moderated discussion will cover both sides of Massachusetts ballot question No. 2, the Ranked Voting Initiative, which asks voters to decide whether or not they should be allowed to rank candidates for office. Worcester State’s Binienda Center for Civic Engagement and the History and Political Science departments are partnering with the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate and the Higher Education Consortium of Central Massachusetts (HECCMA) to host the debate on Thursday, Sept. 17, to honor Constitution Day.

Moderated by Carrie Saldo, host and producer of WGBY’s Connecting Point and contributing reporter at WGBH Boston, the conversation will feature Paul Diego Craney, spokesperson and board member of the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance, and Evan Falchuk, board chair of the Yes On 2 campaign.

The Constitution Day event is now in its eighth year and in the past has provided WSU students an opportunity to travel to the Kennedy Institute and participate in live debate about a constitutional issue. Some years, WSU students have mentored local high school students to take part in these debates. Even though this year it is being held online due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Binienda Center Director Mark Wagner, Ph.D., sees this as a potential boon rather than a setback.

“I think it’s going to be an interesting way to test new ways of civic engagement in the COVID era,” says Wagner. “In the past, our Constitution Day efforts have been relatively focused and on the smaller side, but this one has the potential to involve a wider audience. I think it’s going to be an interesting model for the upcoming year.”

Wagner says he is hoping to conduct a ranked-choice simulation at the end of the debate, which would give attendees an opportunity to better understand the process and what it will look like.

In addition to Constitution Day, Wagner says he and Assistant Professor Anthony Dell’Aera, Ph.D., of the History and Political Science Department, are planning to hold a series of democracy cafes and Zoom teach-ins in October, which will cover different topics related to the November election.

“Tony and I see the Constitution Day event as a kind of a preview of the programming we hope to provide in the run-up to the election in November,” he says.

Wagner says the campus community should expect more information about the October events in the coming weeks.
To register for Constitution Day Event on Ranked Choice Voting, go to https://www.emkinstitute.org/explore-the-institute/public-events-programs/public/ranked-choice-voting [1].