Las Vegas Review-Journal

First set of recall signings tendered

Target Woodhouse: It’s ‘affront to voters’

- By Colton Lochhead Las Vegas Review-journal

The group behind the recall efforts of three Nevada state senators has submitted its first batch of signatures, the Clark County Registrar of Voters Office said Monday.

The group submitted 17,465 signatures in the attempt to recall Sen. Joyce Woodhouse, D-henderson. The registrar has four business days to verify the count and make sure it meets or exceeds the needed 14,412 signatures to move the recall forward.

Woodhouse in a statement called the recall effort “politicall­y motivated” and said it is an “affront to voters and a blatant abuse of the process.”

“I will be monitoring the signature verificati­on process closely, and I look forward to defending my record of accomplish­ment and continuing to fight for my constituen­ts,” Woodhouse said in the statement. “I’m proud of what we accomplish­ed for Nevada’s children and families working in a bipartisan way with Governor Sandoval this past legislativ­e session. It has been an incredible honor to be elected three times by the voters of Senate District 5, and I’m confident voters would make that same decision again.”

If the county registrar of voters determines that enough signatures were submitted, the petitions go to the Secretary of State’s Office, where a sample of 5 percent of the signatures will be pulled to verify that the signers voted in Woodhouse’s district in 2016. The percentage of that sample will then be extrapolat­ed for the full batch.

If that number exceeds 14,412, a special election will be scheduled.

WOODHOUSE

Democrats have been fighting the recall efforts with a “decline to sign” campaign. But the efforts have also drawn a federal Voting Rights Act lawsuit filed on behalf of five voters in Southern Nevada that seeks to end the recalls before any elections could happen.

Attorneys Marc Elias, who served as general counsel to presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton, and Bradley Schrager, former counsel for the Nevada Democratic Party, argue in thelawsuit­thatthespe­cialelecti­ons would put a burden on the plaintiffs and that the recalls would “undermine a republican form of government by threatenin­g to upend the undisputed results of legitimate and regularly scheduled election.”

On Monday, the Indiana-based Publicinte­restlegalf­oundation filed a motion to intervene in the case, saying the plaintiffs are “misusing civil rights laws as partisan political weapons.”

“Nevada has the power under our Constituti­on to decide to have recall elections,” the group’s president, J. Christian Adams, said. “The Voting Rights Act is not a law designed to help Democratic Party interests. It’s intended to protect civil rights, not preserve partisan power.”

Contact Colton Lochhead at clochhead@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4638. Follow @ Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

 ?? Chase Stevens ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Sen. Joyce Woodhouse, D-henderson, is one of three Democratic state senators targeted in a recall effort.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal Sen. Joyce Woodhouse, D-henderson, is one of three Democratic state senators targeted in a recall effort.

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