This bill seeks to correct a current bias in Delaware’s election law impacting the outcome of countless races throughout the state.
Numerous academic analyses have concluded that there is a considerable benefit to a candidate’s name appearing first on the ballot.
In one noteworthy legal proceeding on ballot position bias, the California Supreme Court held that “a significant advantage accrues to a candidate by virtue of a top ballot position.” The High Court further concluded that without incumbents running, approximately 5% of a candidate’s vote share could be attributed to their position on the ballot.
California took action in 1975 to eliminate this flaw by randomizing the listing of candidates on its ballots. The Golden State uses a system where a randomized drawing of letters of the alphabet is conducted, with the resulting order of letters constituting a "randomized alphabet" that is used for determining the order of candidates' names on the ballot.
According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 15 states have enacted reforms to deal with ballot position bias.
Delaware law currently mandates that one political party always appear in the first column on the machine ballots or on the first line of absentee ballots. This bill proposes eradicating ballot position inequity by adopting a randomized system modeled after the one successfully employed in California for nearly five decades.
Statutes affected: Original Text: 15.4502, 15.3124, 15.3001, 15.3003, 15.3302