Marin Independent Journal

California considers easing rules about ballot signatures

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California’s Democratic-controlled Legislatur­e is considerin­g whether to make it more difficult for local election officials to reject ballots because a voter’s signature doesn’t exactly match what’s on file.

Voters who cast ballots by mail must now sign their ballot. Election officials then compare that signature to the one in the voter’s registrati­on file. Election officials can disqualify ballots if the signatures don’t match.

But comparing signatures can be tricky because people don’t always sign their name the same way. It’s a bigger issue after the November election, when more than 86% of votes in California were vote-by-mail ballots.

The secretary of state’s office issued temporary rules for the November election presuming a voter’s signature was legitimate, making an exact match unnecessar­y. To reject a ballot, election officials had to believe “beyond a reasonable doubt” that signatures didn’t match.

Those rules are set to expire in July. A bill before the California Legislatur­e would make them permanent.

Any proposed changes to election laws this year will get more attention because Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is likely to face a recall election. The Legislatur­e has already passed — and Newsom signed — a law saying counties must

mail ballots to all active registered voters for any election called in 2021.

That means a potential recall election could be dominated by vote-by-mail ballots in the state where nearly twice as many voters are registered as Democrats than Republican­s.

But if the bill involving signatures becomes law, it would not take effect until Jan. 1, 2022, meaning it wouldn’t be in place for a possible recall election later this year. However, the secretary of state’s office could simply extend its temporary rules to include a recall election.

No one mentioned the recall during a public hearing Monday on the proposal. State Sen. Josh Becker, the bill’s author and a Democrat from Menlo Park, said it will make permanent “what we know works from November 2020.”

Of the more than 17.7 million ballots California­ns cast in the November general

election, 49,816 ballots were rejected because a signature did not match. More than 86% of all ballots cast in that election were vote by mail.

“This gives confidence to all California­ns that their votes are counted,” Becker said.

Eric Harris, director of public policy for the advocacy group Disability Rights California, said the bill “has the best interests of voters in mind,” noting voters with disabiliti­es are more likely to have their signatures rejected.

But Ruth Weiss, vice president of Election Integrity Project California, noted the state’s election law already requires the rules to be “liberally construed” in favor of a voter. She said the temporary rules in place for the 2020 election “provided loopholes for virtually all signatures to be accepted, making efforts at legitimate signature verificati­on a mere sham.”

 ?? RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Voters wait in line to cast their ballot on Super Tuesday at a voting center in El Segundo.
RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Voters wait in line to cast their ballot on Super Tuesday at a voting center in El Segundo.

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