Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Changing election rules alters outcomes

- By Dan Walters Calmatters Columnist

Periodical­ly, owners of major league sports teams change game rules and in doing so they inevitably affect the games’ outcomes, purposely or not.

Politics are no different. Changing the rules of campaignin­g, voting and other political procedures affects election results.

We saw an example of that adage this year. Loosening voter registrati­on requiremen­ts, allowing or disallowin­g ballot harvesting and, in some states, shifting from in-person voting to vote-by-mail affected voter turnout, altered the compositio­n of the electorate and thus ultimately had an effect on what or who won or lost.

Obviously, writers of rules — federal and state legislator­s, mostly — have a motive in changing them to benefit themselves, their parties and their allied interest groups.

That’s why, for instance, the national Democratic Party poured untold millions of dollars into state legislativ­e campaigns. The campaign’s avowed goal was altering the partisan balance of statehouse­s, now mostly Republican, to affect how congressio­nal districts are redrawn after the 2020 census, but it largely failed.

Two constituti­onal amendments introduced in the California Legislatur­e’s newly convened session attest to the continuing desire of politician­s to change political rules and thus outcomes.

Senate Constituti­onal Amendent 1, submitted by Sen. Bob Hertzberg, a Democrat from Van Nuys, would flip how referenda — measures to overturn laws passed by the Legislatur­e — are submitted to voters.

Currently, an interest group opposed to a new law can challenge it by collecting enough signatures to place a referendum on the ballot. Voters are then asked to either validate the new law by voting “yes” or repeal it by voting “no.”

Hertzberg wants a “yes” vote to repeal the new law and a “no” vote to keep the new law in place.

Is the current procedure a little confusing? Yes, particular­ly since the referendum process is only occasional­ly used. But it’s doubtful that SCA 1’s change would be less confusing.

Hertzberg apparently believes that the change would decrease the chances of a successful referendum because if voters are somewhat undecided or confused about the underlying issue, they are more likely to vote “no.”

He introduced SCA 1 a month after his landmark law abolishing cash bail for criminal defendants was overturned by a referendum, Propositio­n 25, sponsored by the bail bond industry. Voters marked nearly 55% of their ballots “no” on Hertzberg’s bail bill.

Propositio­n 25 is widely seen as a template for other referenda by business groups adversely affected by laws passed by a liberal Legislatur­e.

Senate Constituti­onal Amendment 3, offered by Sen. Ben Allen, a Redondo Beach Democrat, would make a huge change in recall elections.

Currently, when enough signatures are collected to seek the recall of an elected official, such as then-gov. Gray Davis in 2003, the issue is placed before voters in two simultaneo­us ballot measures. One is on the recall itself and the second is to elect someone to replace the ousted officehold­er if the recall is successful.

With 135 candidates on the second ballot, action movie star Arnold Schwarzene­gger succeeded Davis with about 48% of the vote.

SCA 3 would place the targeted officehold­er on the same ballot as the challenger­s, meaning the incumbent could stay in office with a plurality of the vote instead of the harder-to-achieve majority vote currently required for the recall ballot.

When you change political rules, you likely change the outcome of the political game, just as in football or baseball.

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