Oroville Mercury-Register

California spending big money to get out the vote

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO >> California election officials are spending $16 million in a fourweek ad blitz to educate people about voting in the recall that could remove Gov. Gavin Newsom, a campaign that’s officially nonpartisa­n but could benefit the first-term Democrat as he pushes for high turnout.

Through billboards, radio and digital ads, television spots and more, the campaign is designed to make sure voters know about the recall and understand how to cast a ballot. Every registered voter received a ballot in the mail, but many people might be confused or unaware of the race because it’s happening in late summer in an off-election year.

Secretary of State Shirley Weber has said her goal is to increase voter participat­ion across all political affiliatio­ns.

“My goal is 100% voting, and why? Because I think everyone has a voice that needs to be heard,” Weber said on a recent call with reporters.

California has almost twice as many registered Democrats as Republican­s.

That makes it hard to untangle the public policy goal of urging people to exercise their right to vote from the reality that Democrats are likely to benefit, said Jessica Levinson, a professor at Loyola Law School with a focus on government ethics.

“It’s probably just difficult to structure any big get-outthe-vote effort in California without it looking like you are also supporting Democrats,” she said.

Weber, who was joined on the call by Attorney General Rob Bonta, also a Newsom appointee, said promoting voter turnout was not in service of a partisan aim.

“I would always ask the question: What is the alternativ­e to it? To suppress the voting because you think there may be more Democrats registered in California than others?” she said.

California lawmakers approved $35 million for the secretary of state to spend on voter education in a party-line vote in June. It was part of a bill that allowed for an earlier recall, which Democrats hoped would help Newsom defeat it.

Weber’s office set aside half for the statewide education campaign and chose The Sax Agency of Los Angeles from among four applicants. The agency has won other government contracts, including on census efforts and a public awareness campaign about masking during the coronaviru­s.

Sax worked on behalf of the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee in 2020 on a project aimed at motivating Black voters, according to its bid. All other listed work was nonpartisa­n.

The California Republican Party claimed the agency is pro-Democrat. It pointed to Sax’s work with the DCCC and an Instagram post after the 2020 presidenti­al election featuring President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris with the caption, “No words, just a big sigh of relief.”

“It is right to take action to encourage all voters to cast a ballot but hiring a Democrat firm at taxpayer expense only reinforces that Gavin Newsom’s partisan priorities come first,” Chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson said in a statement.

Stacey Legay, the account manager for Sax, said the campaign will target voters across demographi­cs, locations and political ideologies. As an example of the campaign’s cross-party appeal, she said it put up billboards in a heavily Vietnamese area of Orange County, noting those voters tend to lean Republican.

“Frankly, we don’t care what happens, other than that we want everyone to come out and vote,” she said.

A 30-second ad shared by the campaign explains that every registered California voter will get a ballot and details how people can track theirs through the secretary of state website. The campaign plans to target specific population­s, including Black, Asian and Latino voters, veterans and members of the military and formerly incarcerat­ed people, as well as voters across age groups and all 58 counties.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Francisco Torres casts his ballot at the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters office in Sacramento on Monday.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Francisco Torres casts his ballot at the Sacramento County Registrar of Voters office in Sacramento on Monday.

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