Las Vegas Review-Journal

Huntington Beach sued by state over voting law

- By Amy Taxin

HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. — California officials on Monday sued Huntington Beach over a new law that lets the city require voters to provide identifica­tion to cast ballots at the polls starting in 2026.

State Attorney General Rob Bonta said the measure approved by voters in the Southern California city of nearly 200,000 people stands in conflict with state law and could make it harder for poor, non-white, young, elderly and disabled voters to cast ballots.

State officials previously warned that the measure to amend the city’s charter would suppress voter participat­ion and are asking a court to block it from taking effect, he said.

“The right to freely cast your vote is the foundation of our democracy and Huntington Beach’s voter ID policy flies in the face of this principle,” Bonta said in a statement while announcing the lawsuit.

Huntington Beach City Attorney Michael Gates said the city has the authority to take election-related measures under the state’s constituti­on and will defend the decision of local voters.

“The people of Huntington Beach have made their voices clear on this issue,” Gates said in an email.

The measure was passed by voters this year in Huntington Beach, a city in Orange County dubbed “Surf City USA.”

The City Council placed the voter ID measure on the March ballot after a series of hotly contested decisions on topics ranging from flag flying to the removal of books from the public library’s children’s section over concerns about the appropriat­eness of materials. The moves were initiated by a politicall­y conservati­ve council majority, which took office in 2022.

The measure — which would let the city require voter identifica­tion, increase in-person voting sites and monitor ballot drop boxes in local elections — won at the polls in March with 53 percent, county election data shows.

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