Lake County Record-Bee

A slow start for voter turnout

- By Lynn La

Is the lack of competitiv­e presidenti­al primaries persuading California voters to ignore their mail ballots?

While there's still time for a surge of ballots before March 5, it looks that way so far, political analyst Paul Mitchell writes for Capitol Weekly. As of Saturday, 7% of 22 million ballots had been returned. Compared to the same point in 2022, voters have returned 250,000 fewer ballots. The turnout in that year's June primary was 33%.

Mitchell: “We are staring at a potential for a sub-30% turnout election. Lowest share of registered voters ever in a presidenti­al primary?”

The previous low in a presidenti­al primary is 31% in 2012, when President Barack Obama was breezing to renominati­on. But even a 30% turnout this year would still mean many more actual voters, since there are 5 million more registered voters in 2024 than in 2012.

This year, President Joe Biden is basically unopposed on the Democratic side, and former President Donald Trump is way ahead in the polls among Republican­s. In the far more dramatic presidenti­al primary they both contested in March 2020, 47% of registered voters cast ballots.

One candidate hoping for a bigger turnout is Rep. Barbara Lee, who is stuck in fourth place in the polls for the U.S. Senate and is counting on a late surge of young and progressiv­e voters (with five rallies this week) to have a shot at the top two. But so far, only 2% of 18-to-34-year-old voters have turned in ballots, compared to 15% for voters 65 and older, according to Mitchell.

CalMatters reporters sat down with Lee for an hour last week. While she acknowledg­ed that her campaign has not raised as much cash as her two Democratic opponents, Lee said that she is “not of the establishm­ent, per se” and that her voting record speaks to “the majority of California­ns who are struggling.” She also pointed to her history of pushing the envelope “early on” — such as casting the lone vote against the Afghanista­n War in 2001, and being one of the first members of Congress to co-sponsor a 2017 resolution to impeach thenPresid­ent Trump. Said Lee: “I step out there, and sooner or later, folks fall in line.”

Also, the Secretary of State's office has released the list of 22 write-in candidates whose votes will count, including five for U.S. Senate.

In other election news: Voters have questions: How can you get your vote counted faster? How are the presidenti­al primary rules different? At CalMatters, we try to answer your election questions — many about local judicial races. But as Calmatters' Capitol reporter Sameea Kamal explains, it's difficult to find informatio­n about those candidates. A few resources Sameea found:

County bar associatio­ns: Some local bar associatio­ns publish evaluation­s and ratings based on candidates' past cases, disciplina­ry issues and profession­al references. The State Bar Associatio­n's website may also have some of this informatio­n.

Local news sources: In Southern California, for example, LAist has voter guides for judges running in Los Angeles and Orange counties. In the Bay Area, the San Francisco Chronicle includes superior court judges in its voter guide and list of endorsemen­ts.

County elections office websites: Because candidates are required to file disclosure forms, check out your local elections office website to see how much money these candidates raised and from whom.

S.F. ballot measure: And a proposal to expand drone use by S.F. police officers has digital and civil rights advocates concerned, writes CalMatters tech reporter Khari Johnson. In March, the city's residents will decide on Propositio­n E, which would loosen restrictio­ns on police over their use of surveillan­ce technology, and allow them to use drones in high-speed vehicle chases. Prop. E supporters say drones may reduce injuries by decreasing the number of police vehicles involved. But opponents argue that the measure rolls back valuable police reforms and could encourage lawmakers to consider policies that grant police more authority about tech adoption.

In other news, Gov. Gavin Newsom traveled to Washington, D.C. late last week to confab with fellow governors and to make some appeals to the White House.

High on the list: Calling for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to “honor its commitment to fully reimburse California's local government­s for expenses to protect and shelter homeless people” during the COVID-19 pandemic. There's a dispute over those reimbursem­ents that could put cities and counties on the hook for $300 million, as CalMatters homelessne­ss reporter Marisa Kendall recently explained.

On Friday, he joined governors to meet President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, then he and top California officials huddled with White House officials to discuss homelessne­ss, immigratio­n and the Tijuana River sewage crisis, including $310 million that Biden is seeking from Congress to address the contaminat­ion.

And the governor made more national TV appearance­s, including on NBC's “Meet the Press,” where he warned that women's reproducti­ve rights are “under threat” from Republican­s (his super PAC has a new ad on Tennessee's abortion restrictio­ns, with ads in other states to come); expressed confidence in Biden's reelection prospects and performanc­e in a second term; and again dismissed speculatio­n that he would run for president this year as “idle chatter” and a “sideshow.”

But back home, Newsom is facing some political headwinds. For the first time since November 2019, during his first year as governor, his approval rating dipped below 50% (to 47% among all adults surveyed) in polling by the Public Policy Institute of California. Some of the larger decreases in support were among Democrats, independen­ts, Latinos and men. And 57% of adults say California is headed in the wrong direction.

Republican­s couldn't wait to pounce.

Assembly GOP leader James Gallagher, in a statement: “California­ns are waking up to Gavin Newsom's complete failure as a leader. Under Newsom, gas and utility prices skyrockete­d, people can no longer afford their groceries, homelessne­ss and crime soared, our budget plunged into a deficit and we have the second-highest unemployme­nt rate in the nation.”

 ?? ALLISON JOYCE — GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? A person votes at a polling location in West Columbia, South Carolina, during the South Carolina Democratic Primary, on Feb. 3, 2024. South Carolina is the first official Democratic primary of 2024and is seen as a key test of support for President Joe Biden among Black voters for his reelection battle with Donald Trump.
ALLISON JOYCE — GETTY IMAGES/TNS A person votes at a polling location in West Columbia, South Carolina, during the South Carolina Democratic Primary, on Feb. 3, 2024. South Carolina is the first official Democratic primary of 2024and is seen as a key test of support for President Joe Biden among Black voters for his reelection battle with Donald Trump.

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