PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Republican U.S. Rep. Bruce Poliquin on Monday announced he's continuing his effort to have Maine's new election system used for the first time in a congressional race declared unconstitutional.
A federal judge last week rejected Poliquin's request to nullify the outcome of the election and either declare him the winner or order another election. His notice of appeal was filed Monday in U.S. District Court.
Poliquin, who lost his re-election bid to Democratic State Rep. Jared Golden, tweeted Monday evening that a formal appeal will be filed with the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday, dragging on the longshot legal process.
Poliquin claims he should be the winner because he had the most first-place votes on Election Day. But Golden won the race in an extra round of voting in which two independents were eliminated and their votes were reallocated.
"Rank voting came to Maine due to a largely out-of-state funded push to change our election system that has worked well for one hundred years," he said in a statement. "There is nothing more fundamental than our one-person, one vote Constitutional right," he added.
Under ranked-choice voting, all candidates are ranked on the ballot, and a candidate who collects a majority is the winner. If there's no majority winner, then the last-place candidates are eliminated, and their second-choice votes are reassigned to the field. The process is sometimes referred to as an instant runoff.
Supporters say the system eliminates the impact of spoilers and ensures a majority winner. Critics say the system is confusing.
Last week, U.S. District Judge Lance Walker, who was appointed by Republican President Donald Trump, wrote in a ruling that states are given great leeway in how they conduct elections. Critics can question the wisdom of ranked-choice voting, Walker wrote, but such criticism "falls short of constitutional impropriety."
Poliquin has abandoned his recount and Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap said last week that "for all practical purposes this election is concluded."
He added that Poliquin has a right to appeal but "the District Court's ruling makes it legally clear that it is not unconstitutional to lose an election."
Disclaimer: This is unedited, unformatted feed from the Associated Press (AP) wire.