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Many in NY election gave 6 votes to 1 candidate
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PORT CHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- An exit survey indicates that nearly a third of the voters in an unusual election in a New York City suburb cast all six of their votes for one candidate.
Residents of Port Chester chose village trustees last month using a system called cumulative voting.
They each had six votes and could apportion them as they wished among 13 candidates.
Nearly 2,000 of the 3,357 voters completed exit surveys. A report on those surveys was released late Tuesday.
The report says at least 68 percent gave more than one vote to a candidate and 34 percent gave all six votes to one candidate.
The election was ordered by a federal judge who found that the previous system was unfair to Hispanics. The June 15 election resulted in the first Hispanic elected to the board of trustees
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Note carefully that every person had the right to cast 6 votes and that it was a system suggested by the village itself.
This is not a system where only Hispanic voters can vote 6 times to the exclusion of all others as appears to be the suggestion made by that TV news report.