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Overview

Since our founding in 2011, The Center for Election Science (CES) has become the nation’s leading organization advancing approval voting through research, education, advocacy, and on-the-ground implementation. To date, we’ve helped cities adopt approval voting, supported legislative champions in multiple states, and built a robust evidence base to improve our elections.

In 2025, CES made major progress toward real-world pilots, legislative breakthroughs, community partnerships, and empirical research that will influence election reform nationally. This year alone, we worked across multiple states, strengthening both bipartisan coalitions and local civic movements. We also expanded our data and legislative capacity, enabling faster response to emerging political windows—several of which appeared in Utah and Maryland.

We will update this post in January 2026 to include final developments from the remainder of 2025.

What is Approval Voting?

Approval voting is a straightforward, voter-friendly method where individuals can select (“approve”) as many candidates as they wish, rather than being restricted to choosing only one. This small shift creates a major improvement in how elections function. Instead of forcing voters to strategize, guess electability, or worry about “wasting” their vote, approval voting allows them to express their full and honest preferences.

Under approval voting, the candidate with the most total approvals wins. That simple tally produces outcomes that more accurately reflect the will of the community. Because voters aren’t limited to a single choice, strong but lesser-known candidates, consensus builders, and independents have a fairer shot—while extreme or polarizing candidates are less likely to win with only narrow bases of support, like they do now. The system rewards candidates who appeal to a broad coalition rather than those who rely on fragmentation.

Approval voting also eliminates the common problems of vote splitting and spoilers. In plurality elections, similar candidates can divide their supporters, allowing someone less preferred by most voters to win. Approval voting fixes this by letting voters support all candidates they find acceptable. Research consistently shows that approval voting elects candidates who better represent the majority’s preferences, increases voter satisfaction, and strengthens trust in election outcomes.

Perhaps most importantly, approval voting is remarkably easy to implement. It requires no new voting machines, no costly ballot redesigns, and minimal voter education. In many jurisdictions, it can be adopted simply by adjusting existing ballot instructions and machine settings. Because of its simplicity, transparency, and effectiveness, approval voting is a powerful, practical reform that helps deliver elections that are fairer, more representative, and more reflective of real voter support.

Clear here to see a visual explanation of how approval voting works. 
 

Why This Reform and Why Now?

For the Effective Altruism community, approval voting is a meta-level intervention that supports nearly every other cause area. EA solutions — whether in global health, AI governance, biosecurity, climate, animal welfare, or institutional decision-making — ultimately rely on governments willing and able to enact evidence-based policy. A voting system that produces polarizing, low-mandate leaders makes long-term, high-impact policymaking difficult or impossible. Approval voting expands the political space for consensus-driven candidates, reduces the influence of entrenched interests, improves epistemic quality in public decision-making, and increases the likelihood that governments will adopt policies aligned with broad societal welfare rather than narrow partisan objectives. In this sense, approval voting is a governance-level force multiplier: by repairing the input system of democracy, it increases the tractability and durability of progress across the entire portfolio of EA priorities. Approval voting is a straightforward, voter-friendly method where individuals can select (“approve”) as many candidates as they wish, rather than being restricted to choosing only one. This small shift creates a major improvement in how elections function. Instead of forcing voters to strategize, guess electability, or worry about “wasting” their vote, approval voting allows them to express their full and honest preferences.
 

I. Background

The Center for Election Science (CES) is a nonpartisan nonprofit dedicated to strengthening American democracy through approval voting—a simple, cost-free upgrade to current elections that gives voters the freedom to support all the candidates they approve of.

Our mission is to bring fairness, representation, and trust back into how we vote by:

  • Providing world-class research and public education rooted in political science and voter psychology.
  • Supporting policymakers, election administrators, and civic coalitions with implementation expertise.
  • Running real-world pilot programs that demonstrate how approval voting performs under real voter behavior—not theory or simulation.
  • Advocating for evidence-based electoral reforms that expand consensus, reduce polarization, and increase voter voice.

Historically, CES has played a unique role in the election reform ecosystem by:

  • Filling the evidence gap through large-scale voter studies conducted in partnership with SurveyUSA and academic researchers.
  • Advancing reforms without partisanship, earning trust across the political spectrum.
  • Avoiding high-cost ballot initiatives and instead pursuing cost-effective, scalable legislative and pilot-based wins.
  • Building durable local coalitions rather than parachuting in—as demonstrated by our years-long relationship-building in places like Utah, Missouri, and Maryland.

CES is now entering one of the most consequential phases in its history: with live implementation scheduled in Utah, a mayor-backed municipal pilot pathway in Maryland, and legislative momentum building in multiple states, the next 12–24 months may determine the trajectory of approval voting for decades.
 

II. A Year in Review

Key Numbers and Reach (2025)

  • Number of states engaged: 5
  • Active legislative efforts: 2 (Maryland & Utah)
  • Pilot programs in development: 2 (Frederick & Cumberland, MD)
  • Major voter studies conducted: 3
  • Free Public presentations, events, & trainings: 7

Program Distribution

By Intervention Type

Our work in 2025 spanned four core strategic pillars:

  • Pilot Program Development
     Creating real-world demonstration sites in Maryland.
  • Legislative Advocacy & Policy Support
    Working with bipartisan sponsors on approval voting legislation in both Utah and Maryland
  • Research & Public Education
    Conducting empirical studies, collaborating with academia,  and providing public-facing education.
  • Grassroots & Coalition Support
    Partnering with civic groups to build sustainable, locally-led momentum.
     

CES’s “test-kitchen” approach focuses on rapid experimentation, data generation, and low-cost, high-yield opportunities—a model that differentiates us from more expensive, ballot-centric reform efforts.

By Geography

In 2025, CES worked across several regions:

  • Utah – Live implementation of approval voting for a special election. Successfully lobbied legislature to pass amendment including approval voting in future pilots.
  • Maryland – Pilot development with Frederick and Cumberland officials. Successfully lobbied state legislators to bring bills allowing approval voting to committee in the house and senate.
  • Iowa/Colorado – Recruitment of statewide candidates to support approval voting
  • North Dakota – Continued monitoring after statewide repeal that undermines home rule.
  • Missouri – Ongoing support to local ally groups.
  • St Louis- Approval Voting used successfully again in the 2025 municipal election. 
     

Highlighted Projects

Below are several examples that illustrate our 2025 impact and strategic value:

Utah Special Election (Live Approval Voting Implementation)

CES and partners secured a groundbreaking opportunity: the first use of approval voting by a political party to select a sitting replacement  in U.S. history. This initiative emerged when the Forward Party considered approval voting for selecting a State Senate nominee—an extraordinary natural experiment and national proof point.

CES will provide:

  • Technical guidance
  • Voter education materials
  • Strategic political support
  • Research design for evaluating voter behavior and candidate outcomes
     

Cumberland & Frederick, Maryland Pilot Pathway

Following extensive engagement with local officials and administrators, CES identified Cumberland and Frederick, Maryland as ideal sites for a 2026 pilot. We’ve already begun the required education, legal analysis, and civic coalition building necessary for formal adoption.

SurveyUSA Statewide Voter Study

Our Maryland voter research revealed:

  • 74.6% of Maryland voters support improving the current voting system
  • Broad cross-partisan appeal for approval voting
  • Strong desire for simpler, more representative elections
     

III. Organizational Updates

2025 brought significant internal progress at CES.

Operations

  • Strengthened legislative, research, and donor relations capacity
  • Implemented a full grants calendar and streamlined application infrastructure
  • Improved rapid-response capabilities to leverage political windows

Transparency & Communications

  • Launched the CES Language Bank to unify message discipline
  • Increased public-facing communication via virtual and in-person events, newsletters, and op-eds
  • Started publishing clearer progress updates tailored to donors and partners

Research & Evaluation

  • Completed multiple voter studies, including an IRB voter satisfaction study with 7500 registered voters participating (with more in development)
  • Formalized evaluation frameworks for pilot impact assessment
  • Expanded academic partnerships for 2026 research cycles
  • Advocated for the inclusion of approval voting in the NAACP states voting rights act

Funding & Development

  • Re-engagement strategy for mid-tier and lapsed donors
  • Major gift pipeline expansion for 2025–2026
  • Strengthened relationships with state-based civic funders and national foundations
     

IV. Future Plans (2026 & Beyond)

Pilot Implementation

  • Execute Utah’s approval voting special election and provide analysis one all votes are counted
  • Launch Cumberland & Frederick, MD municipal pilots in the 2026 cycle
  • Evaluate approvals impact to increase turn out
  • Expand early-stage exploration to additional high-opportunity municipalities

Legislative Momentum

  • Support sponsoring lawmakers in at least two states
  • Develop bipartisan legislative playbooks for new partners
  • Expand coalition-building with local civic organizations

Research Expansion

  • Partner with universities to measure voter experience, turnout effects, candidate strategy changes, and consensus outcomes
  • Produce new data for policymakers nationwide

Infrastructure & Capacity

  • Build a dedicated implementation toolkit for jurisdictions
  • Strengthen our evaluation and reporting systems
  • Grow CES’s development function to stabilize multi-year funding
     

V. Room for More Funding

CES has more opportunities than we can currently fund.

We estimate that with additional support we could effectively deploy an additional $350,000 in 2025–2026 toward:

  • Scaling pilot implementation
  • Rapid-response legislative support
  • Expanded public-facing research
  • On-the-ground coalition and advocacy partnerships
  • Voter education in emerging pilot cities
     

Every contribution helps CES seize rapidly emerging political openings—openings that often close quickly if not met with immediate capacity.

If you have questions or would like to discuss supporting CES’s strategic work, you can reach our team anytime at fundraising@electionscience.org.

You can support CES directly at https://electionscience.org/giving


VI. The Path Forward

In today’s deeply polarized political climate, our electoral system often amplifies division rather than reflecting the true will of the people. Approval voting provides a practical and proven solution: a way for voters to express support for all the candidates they genuinely favor, not just their top choice. By enabling more representative outcomes, approval voting helps bridge divides, encourages cooperation over confrontation, and fosters leaders who are accountable to a broader spectrum of constituents. It’s a tool that can move us closer to a government that truly serves everyone, not just the loudest voices.

At the Center for Election Science, we are dedicated to making this vision a reality. Through research, advocacy, and strategic partnerships, we work to implement approval voting in communities across the country, helping create elections that reflect the preferences of all voters. Your interest and support are vital in this effort. Thank you for taking the time to consider our work and for joining us in shaping a more representative, functional, and inclusive democracy. Together, we can strengthen the foundations of our union and ensure a government that works for all people.

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Fixing The Bottleneck Behind Every EA Cause: Our Broken Voting System

I don't think you have really provided much evidence to think that voting systems are the bottleneck behind every EA cause, which is an extremely very strong claim. In some cases, I suspect the opposite is true. For example, I think most EAs were supportive of the UK's 0.7% GDP foreign aid commitment that the Conservative government made. But this was never popular with voters, and probably lasted as long as it did only because the government was not maximally accountable to the desires of voters. The "full and honest preferences" of the electorate would almost definitely have been to cut aid significantly.

Hi there Larks, our position is that a functional, less-divided government that can actually enact policy is critical infrastructure for advancing many high-impact goals. A system that reduces partisan gridlock and toxic rivalry (as Approval Voting aims to do) can lead to more stable, long-term policy that is essential for complex issues like pandemic preparedness, climate change mitigation, or global health security. These problems require years of consistent effort, not policy reversals with every election cycle. When political energy is spent on partisan warfare, like we’re seeing, the focus shifts from evidence-based solutions to scoring political points. A system rewarding consensus may encourage legislators to focus on what works rather than who wins. Regardless of a policy's popularity, a government paralyzed by division often lacks the political capacity to take meaningful action, even on issues where voters do agree. Improving the mechanism of governance is about enabling the system to serve the collective good with competence and speed. Ultimately, a political system that prioritizes cooperation and competence over extremism gives EA advocates a stronger platform to champion high-leverage policies and allocate resources effectively. It's about building a better engine for positive change. We wanted our post to invite conversation, so I am glad to see you jump in with your thoughts. Thank you.

I think it's fair to argue that a democracy that's more responsive to voters may not always bring about good policy. And maybe you're giving an example of a situation where that's true. But I do think it's fair to claim that a democracy that's more responsive to voters—and less responsive to the influence of large corporations—will more often bring about good policy.

i think the evidence is pretty straightforward. e.g. bayesian regret figures by princeton math phd warren smith show that approval voting roughly doubles the human welfare impact of democracy.

https://www.rangevoting.org/BayRegsFig

doing some ballpark math to see how many lives that would save:

https://www.rangevoting.org/LivesSaved

i've never seen any EA cause that could even remotely compete with such a massive improvement, especially given the cost is essentially zero, once you've spent the relatively minor cost to run a ballot measure. as opposed to e.g. malaria nets, where you have to pay an ongoing cost to produce them. fixing the voting method is the policy that lubricates the gears for all other policies.

bayesian regret figures by princeton math phd warren smith show that approval voting roughly doubles the human welfare impact of democracy.

Their result is that, in their model, outcomes more closely match voter preferences. But my example is one where voter preferences are opposite to what many EAs think is best for human welfare. 

doing some ballpark math to see how many lives that would save:

Suppose the USA, by adopting range voting and thus making better decisions, lowers the risk of a 2-billion population crash in 50 years, by 5%. I consider this a conservative estimate.

These numbers just seem totally made up. Why should we believe that approval voting has anything like such a large impact?

"best for human welfare" just means the sum of all individual (self interested) utilities. so voter preferences cannot be opposite of what is best for human welfare, by definition.

caveat: there's a disparity between intrinsic and instrumental preferences, in other words voters don't actually know what they want. but to solve that you need an entirely different paradigm, namely election by jury.

better voting methods give you the best you can get from the mediocre human brains you have to work with.

> These numbers just seem totally made up. Why should we believe that approval voting has anything like such a large impact?

the page directly addresses that question quite incisively, citing the bayesian regret figures. the upgrade from plurality voting to score voting is roughly double the effect of having democracy in the first place. and approval voting is just the binary (slightly less optimal but dead simple and politically practical) version of score voting.

so voter preferences cannot be opposite of what is best for human welfare, by definition.

This is clearly not true. The example I gave was foreign aid, which benefits foreigners at the expense of citizens. Since only one of these groups can vote, there is little reason to think that the preferences of this subgroup will align with overall human welfare. And we know it doesn't - hence the polling data.

This is true for most EA cause areas. Existential risk work is about protecting the interests of future generations; animal welfare work is about protecting the interests of animals - neither of which groups can vote. 

the page directly addresses that question quite incisively, citing the bayesian regret figures.

No methodology or source is given for why we should expect a 5% decline in the risk of 2 billion deaths.

This is clearly not true. The example I gave was foreign aid, which benefits foreigners at the expense of citizens. Since only one of these groups can vote, there is little reason to think that the preferences of this subgroup will align with overall human welfare.

that's incorrect. a rational entity's goal is to rationalize the net utility of the smallest group that includes itself. genes are just trying to maximize their expected number of copies made. the appearance of "altruism" is an illusion caused by:

  1. kin selection.
  2. reciprocal altruism.

it's logically and empirically proven that you cannot actually aim for maximizing the welfare of the "universe". if you try to maximize the sum of utility, that would justify trying to make as many new people as possible, so as not to "pre-murder" them and it would mean people should decrease their personal utility as much as possible, as long as it increases net utility. or kill one person if it helps cause two people to be born. whereas if you try to maximize average utility, then you want to kill people who are less happy than average. both of these are obviously untenable and don't remotely fit with observed actual human behavior. this is arguably the most elementary fact in the whole of ethical theory.

https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/repugnant-conclusion/

i discuss all of this in my "ethics 101" primer here.

This is true for most EA cause areas. Existential risk work is about protecting the interests of future generations; animal welfare work is about protecting the interests of animals - neither of which groups can vote.

the point is that if you want to altruistically help future generations, or animals for that matter, it makes sense to do so in the most efficient way possible. but the fundamental desire to be truly altruistic in the first place is irrational. "altruism" as we normally use the term is just the selfish behavior of genes trying to help copies of. themselves that happen to be in other bodies. again, clearly explained in this veritasium video and is just trivial biology 101.

No methodology or source is given for why we should expect a 5% decline in the risk of 2 billion deaths.

it's absolutely given, right there in plain english. the BR figures are cited, and there are multiple plausible independent lines of reasoning from which to derive comparable figures. i don't know why you're just ignoring that as if it's not right there written plain as day.

Executive summary: The Center for Election Science (CES) argues that approval voting—a simple system letting voters select all candidates they support—offers a practical, bipartisan reform to reduce polarization, improve representation, and strengthen democratic decision-making, with 2025 marking major legislative and pilot progress in Utah and Maryland.

Key points:

  1. CES promotes approval voting as a low-cost, voter-friendly alternative that eliminates vote splitting and better reflects majority preferences.
  2. The organization positions approval voting as a meta-level intervention supporting effective altruist priorities by improving governance quality and policy tractability.
  3. In 2025, CES engaged in five states, ran two active legislative efforts in Maryland and Utah, and developed pilots in Frederick and Cumberland, Maryland.
  4. The Utah special election represented the first live U.S. use of approval voting to select a sitting officeholder, providing a national proof point.
  5. Maryland research showed 74.6% voter support for election reform and cross-partisan appeal for approval voting.
  6. CES expanded research, communications, and donor infrastructure, and seeks an additional $350,000 to scale pilots, legislative support, and voter education through 2026.

 

 


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