ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Englewood's November election is already historic.
For the first time in more than 70 years, Englewood voters will decide who their mayor will be, rather than the Englewood City Council appointing someone. This sparked conversations about the city's voting process.
Englewood voters currently use plurality voting, meaning the candidate with the most votes wins. After Englewood voters recently passed a measure allowing them to elect their own mayor, city leaders began discussing whether the city should switch to a majority-vote method instead.
No change was made to voting methods. The conversations, however, concerned a group of citizens looking to preserve the current voting method in Englewood.
"Something as big as how we vote is something that I think deserves to be

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