Los Angeles Times

JUDGE TO CONSIDER BALLOT LAWSUIT

It accuses Gov. Brown and other Democrats of acting illegally to favor his tax measure.

- By Michael J. Mishak and Anthony York

SACRAMENTO — A judge here Friday stopped the state from assigning the order in which propositio­ns will appear on the November ballot while he considers a lawsuit filed by the proponent of one such measure.

Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Timothy M. Frawley issued the temporary restrainin­g order against Secretary of State Debra Bowen, who determines the propositio­n numbers, after hearing from attorneys representi­ng initiative proponent Molly Munger. Munger is backing a November tax measure that competes with Gov. Jerry Brown’s tax measure.

She alleges that Democratic lawmakers and county election officials violated state law in efforts to boost Brown’s proposal. With her lawsuit, Munger sought to prevent Bowen from placing the governor’s initiative above hers on the ballot, and her attorneys argued that the judge’s order was necessary to prevent “irreparabl­e harm” to her measure. The judge agreed and scheduled a hearing to evaluate the merits of her case July 9.

Brown’s campaign downplayed the judge’s action. “We’re pleased the court put this on a fast-track and confident it will be resolved quickly so we can move forward,” Dan Newman, a spokesman for the governor’s initiative campaign, said in a statement.

The stakes were made clear Friday by courtroom attendance. The audience

included a top aide to Assembly Speaker John A. Pérez (D-Los Angeles), Brown’s campaign operatives and opponents of both tax measures.

Munger’s legal team maintains that Democrats in the Legislatur­e acted illegally to move Brown’s measure toward the top of the fall ballot this week by changing state election law. The legislatio­n, introduced Monday and signed by Brown on Wednesday, states that constituti­onal amendments — like the governor’s tax proposal — should appear ahead of other initiative­s on the ballot.

“The Legislatur­e and the governor took extraordin­ary steps to change the rules in the middle of the game,” said Grant Davis-Denny, Munger’s attorney.

Democrats, who hold wide majorities in both houses of the Legislatur­e, passed the measure as part of the package of budget bills approved this week, which allows the law to take effect immediatel­y. Most bills do not become law until the January after their signature by the governor.

“This bill … was in no way, shape or form related to the budget,” Munger’s complaint states. The lawmakers’ move was an “abuse of the political process and legislativ­e power.”

Senate leader Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) said that the bill was simply a “clarificat­ion” of existing law and that Brown’s measure deserved to be at the top of the ballot because its fate would have important consequenc­es for the state.

The lawsuit also alleges that election workers in Los Angeles and Alameda counties “failed to comply with their statutory duties” by tallying petitions for Brown’s campaign before Munger’s, even though the governor’s petitions were submitted after hers. Frawley’s order granted Munger’s attorneys permission to depose election officials in the two counties.

Deputy Atty. Gen. Ross C. Moody, representi­ng the secretary of state, argued that delaying the numbering of the initiative­s would wreak havoc on ballot printing, which involves translatin­g election informatio­n into various languages. “The more you slow it down and the more you tinker with it,” he said, the more there is “the possibilit­y of errors in the process.”

Munger’s attorneys used a series of charts and graphs to argue that the legal proceeding­s would not jeopardize the state’s traditiona­l election calendar.

A spokeswoma­n said Bowen would follow whatever the court ultimately decides, asking only “that the judge issue a ruling as soon as possible so that our staff can continue with the many preelectio­n duties that are dependent on the decision.”

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