Oroville Mercury-Register

State to mail every voter a ballot in future elections

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO » Every registered California voter will get a ballot mailed to them in future elections under a bill signed Monday by Democratic

Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The law makes permanent a change adopted during the pandemic for the 2020 election and the recent recall against Newsom. California, the nation’s most populous state, joins several other Western states in mailing all voters a ballot, including Utah, Colorado, Washington and Oregon.

Under the new law, ballots in California must go out at least 29 days before the election. Voters still have the option to drop off their ballot or vote in person. Prior to the pandemic, many California­ns were already voting by mail.

“Voters like having options for returning their bal

lot whether by mail, at a secure drop box, a voting center or at a traditiona­l polling station. And the more people who participat­e in elections, the stronger our democracy and the more we have assurance that elections reflect the will of the people of California,” California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Newsom signed 10 other voting-related bills on Monday, crafting them as part of an effort to expand voting rights and access. Voting rights have become a major political flashpoint nationally. Democrat-led states are pushing legislatio­n aimed at expanding voting access while many Republican-led states are trying to tighten it amid baseless accusation­s of widespread voter fraud by former President Donald Trump and other GOP leaders.

“As states across our country continue to enact undemocrat­ic voter suppressio­n laws, California is increasing voter access, expanding voting options and bolstering elections integrity and transparen­cy,” Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Mail-in voting put California Republican­s in a tricky spot during the recent recall election against Newsom, which he handily defeated. Many Republican­s didn’t trust the process, leaving party leaders to both encourage their voters to cast ballots while promising they were closely monitoring claims of fraud.

Republican­s who hold a minority in the state Legislatur­e rejected the effort to expand mail balloting.

Another proposal Newsom signed relaxes the rules around ballot signatures, giving officials more leeway to accept ballots if the signature doesn’t exactly match what’s on file. The legislatio­n by Democratic Sen. Josh Becker bars election officials from taking a voter’s party preference into account when evaluating their signature. Republican­s in the state Legislatur­e also opposed the bill.

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? People wait in line outside a voting center to cast their recall ballots in Huntington Beach Every registered California voter will get a ballot mailed to them in future elections under a bill signed Monday by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE People wait in line outside a voting center to cast their recall ballots in Huntington Beach Every registered California voter will get a ballot mailed to them in future elections under a bill signed Monday by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.

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