Just in time for March Madness: here’s a Common Ground Democracy essay describing a new form of voting that resembles the much-beloved NCAA men’s and women’s tournaments. This essay is based on my contribution to the symposium that the Ohio State Law Journal recently held on Nick Stephanopoulos’s book Aligning Election Law. Bracket Voting is a “Condorcet-consistent” electoral method. Its two main virtues are (1) unlike other Condorcet-consistent systems, it doesn’t require any additional rules for an election that has no Condorcet Winner; instead, whoever wins the election according to the Bracket Voting procedure wins the election (but a Condorcet Winner, when there is one, will always prevail given the structure of Bracket Voting); and (2) the similarity of its format to familiar sports tournaments will make it easy for voters to understand and viewed as an inherently fair form of electoral competition.