Fort Bragg Advocate-News

California sues city to stop voter ID requiremen­t

- By Alexei Koseff

California is taking Huntington Beach to court again — this time over a change to its city charter adopted last month by local voters that would allow the city to require voter identifica­tion in municipal elections.

Conservati­ve city officials in Huntington Beach pushed for voter ID, a popular policy in Republican states, to address concerns from constituen­ts about election integrity that have increasing­ly cropped up in the wake of former President Trump's false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

But Attorney General Rob Bonta and Secretary of State Shirley Weber announced today that they would seek to invalidate the new law for interferin­g with state protection­s of voting rights. The officials, both Democrats, argue that Huntington Beach's ID requiremen­t could disenfranc­hise voters and is unnecessar­y because there is not widespread fraud in California elections.

“It really is a solution looking for a problem, because we have not found this problem,” Weber said at a press conference. “We have worked very hard to make sure that every eligible California­n knows that they have the right to vote.”

The lawsuit, filed in Orange County Superior Court, contends that elections are an issue of statewide importance governed by statewide rules and that cities do not have authority to implement additional regulation­s that could interfere with a voter's ability to cast a ballot.

Bonta said that California­ns must already present identifica­tion and swear under penalty of perjury when they register to vote, allowing for a more expedited voting process. He said Huntington Beach had not provided a compelling reason for requiring voter ID at the polls.

“We believe that the position of the city of Huntington Beach is not only misguided, it is blatantly and flatly illegal,” Bonta said.

Huntington Beach City Attorney Michael Gates said the law — which takes effect in 2026, and also authorizes the city to add more in-person voting locations and monitor ballot drop-boxes — is intended to increase participat­ion in elections.

“The people of Huntington Beach have made their voices clear on this issue and the people's decision on the March 5th ballot measures for election integrity is final,” he said in a statement. “To that end, the City will vigorously uphold and defend the will of the people.”

Bonta and Weber already warned Huntington Beach last fall that its voter identifica­tion proposal would violate a provision in California's election code that prohibits “mass, indiscrimi­nate, and groundless challengin­g of voters solely for the purpose of preventing voters from voting.”

City officials put the measure on the ballot anyway and it passed by 7 percentage points in the March primary. The Secretary of State's office finally certified those results on Friday.

State Sen. Dave Min, an Irvine Democrat who represents Huntington Beach in the Legislatur­e and is running for Congress, has separately introduced Senate Bill 1174, which would prevent local government­s from implementi­ng voter ID requiremen­ts, a direct challenge to the city.

In his statement, Gates pointed to the bill as further evidence that Huntington Beach currently has legal authority to require voter ID in elections.

That is “absolutely not” the case, Min told CalMatters. He said local government­s cannot contradict federal and state laws for running elections with federal and state races, and his bill is merely intended to clear up any potential ambiguity around elections where only local issues are on the ballot: “We shouldn't have 100 cities doing 100 different voter identifica­tion requiremen­ts.”

 ?? LAUREN JUSTICE — FOR CALMATTERS ?? Voters fill out their ballots at a vote center at the Huntington Beach Central Library in Huntington Beach on March 5, 2024.
LAUREN JUSTICE — FOR CALMATTERS Voters fill out their ballots at a vote center at the Huntington Beach Central Library in Huntington Beach on March 5, 2024.

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