PLEASE contact your Assembly member http://assembly.ca.gov/assemblymembers

and ask them to vote 'no' on AB1413 unless it is amended to preserve  
write-in voting. Its going to the Assembly Floor next week, the week  
of January 30th


http://www.ballot-access.org/2012/01/26/california-assembly-elections-committee-passes-bill-to-eliminate-write-in-space-on-general-election-ballots-for-congress-and-state-office/

California Assembly Elections Committee Passes Bill to Eliminate Write- 
in Space on General Election Ballots for Congress and State  
OfficeJanuary 26th, 2012
On January 26, the California Assembly Elections Committee unanimously  
passed AB 1413, which tweaks several aspects of the top-two system,  
and which also removes write-in space from November ballots for  
Congress and partisan state office. Some of the legislators appeared  
to believe that write-in space on the ballot is a good idea. But they  
still voted for the bill, apparently for two reasons: (1) California  
elections officials say the bill must pass quickly or they will not be  
able to administer the election. Some legislators fear that if the  
bill were amended to leave write-in space on the ballot and to provide  
that write-ins may be counted, the bill would lose support; (2) the  
proponents of top-two are vehemently opposed to allowing write-in  
space on the November ballot, at least in the 2012 election.

The primary funder for the legal defense of the top-two system, Dr.  
Charles Munger, Jr., attended the hearing, along with four attorneys  
who are with the law firm that has been defending the top-two system  
in court. Dr. Munger did not testify. But after the hearing, he spoke  
of his great satisfaction that in 2012, California voters in the  
general election for Congress and state office will be forced (if they  
vote at all) to vote for one of the two candidates listed on the  
ballot. He spoke disparagingly of voters who persist in voting for  
candidates who can’t win. This is an authoritarian approach to voting  
rights, and Dr. Munger seems to have no empathy for voters whose  
political values are such that they may not be able to vote for either  
of the two listed candidates. Of course, this approach to voting has  
the effect of reducing voter participation.

It is possible that a bill to restore write-ins will be introduced  
soon, but it could not take effect in time for the November 2012  
election.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.foxandhoundsdaily.com/2012/01/ab1413-gut-and-amend-abuse-would-gut-voter-voice/

AB1413 “gut and amend” abuse would gut voter voice by eliminating  
write-in voting without a public vote

By Michael Feinstein, co-spokesperson, Green Party of California and a  
former Mayor and City Councilman in Santa Monica, Calif.

A bill about to be passed by the Legislature - AB 1413 - would rob us  
of our right to vote for write-in candidates, a right we’ve enjoyed  
and exercised since California statehood in 1850.

With such a major change, one would assume it’s imminent passage is  
the culmination of a long public process, where the proposed change  
has been publicly vetted, with broad participation by civic and good  
government groups in debates, public forums, op/eds and talk shows.

But AB1413 hasn’t gone through such a process. Instead it’s come  
through the back door in a "gut and amend" bill, gutted a few days  
before the end of the August 2011 legislative session and now back for  
a quick ‘emergency’ 2/3 vote so it can go into effect immediately.

AB1413 is being pushed hard by the County Clerks, because it addresses  
ballot-printing requirements they believe could create an unnecessary  
burden and significantly increase election costs. Great, let’s address  
this. But there is no reason to mix such a technical fix with such a  
profound voting rights issue.

Where is this coming from?

There are currently both state and federal lawsuits challenging Senate  
Bill 6 (SB6); a federal appeals court will soon hear the federal  
lawsuit (Chamness v. Bowen). SB6 was the implementing statute for  
Proposition 14, which created the jungle primary/top two general  
election process for California and is slated to be tried for the  
first time this year.

The authors of Proposition 14 specifically avoided putting the write- 
in question on the ballot before the people, by hiding it in SB6. What  
SB6 says is that even though voters’ ballots include a space to cast  
write-ins, such votes won’t be counted! This violates our state  
constitution, which guarantees the right for everyone to have his or  
her vote counted. This is one of the main points of both lawsuits.

But instead of eliminating the portion of SB6 that deprives us of our  
ability to cast write-in votes and thus protecting our right to have  
our votes counted, AB1413 would get rid of the ability to cast write- 
ins entirely -- and do so without meaningful public debate.

This dark way of doing politics is exactly how we got Proposition 14  
in the first place. Proposition 14 was placed on the ballot (and SB6  
approved by the legislature at the same time) between 3:40 am and 6:55  
am, in February 2009 – fifteen months before Proposition 14 appeared  
on the ballot. This was in response to political extortion by then  
State Senator Abel Maldonado, who named that as his price to give the  
legislature the final ‘yes’ vote it needed to reach 2/3 to approve  
that year’s eight months’ overdue state budget.

Whether one cares or not about write-in voting, good government  
demands that the people have a say before Sacramento makes such a  
radical change to our election laws.  At a minimum this proposed  
change should’ve been introduced in a regular bill to allow for months  
of public hearings. More appropriately, if the legislature truly  
believes that Californians should lose their right to write-in voting,  
it should put that question before us via the initiative process and  
let the people decide.

But for the immediate present, with the County Clerks pushing hard for  
passage before the end of the month, the Assembly should amend AB1413  
to ensure that voters can continue to vote for write-in candidates,  
and send it back amended to the Senate, which passed it in its present  
form last week.

Who would oppose this? One of the three listed supporters of AB1413 is  
the mis-named ‘Californians to Defend the Open Primary’, a San Rafael- 
based non-profit ‘educational’ organization funded by the same large  
California corporations and individual billionaire that funded  
Proposition 14.

Without disclosing their reasons, these “Defenders” of democracy have  
pushed hard for Californian’s write-in option to be taken away.  Why?

Perhaps jungle primary supporters oppose write-in voting because they  
want to limit – not encourage – competition. One only has to look as  
recently as the November 2010 US Senate election in Alaska, where Lisa  
Murkowski was elected via write-ins after voters decided that neither  
the Democratic nor Republican nominees were acceptable. Such a popular  
outcome would’ve been forbidden under SB6. Here in California, voters  
elected two members to the US House and one to the US Senate via write- 
ins between 1930 and 1983.

By contrast, the absence of write-in votes gives the misleading  
appearance of public embrace for such limited options, because there  
is no way for voters to register their differences or dissent.

But even without the Top Two, AB1413 is still a bad idea. Californians  
have successfully used the write-in option for 161 years. In some  
cases, it's been a democratic safety valve for voters who don’t agree  
with the choices before them. In others, it allows the system itself  
to adapt to changing issues and circumstances by allowing new  
candidates into our extraordinarily long election process. What if a  
major new issue arises during the fall that has no champion, or if a  
candidate falls gravely ill or is convicted of a crime days before the  
November election?

By ensuring our right to choose a candidate of our choice, write-in  
votes protect our fundamental right to vote. There has been no  
evidence that the presence of the write-in option is hurting our  
democracy. By contrast, it gives voice to voters that don't feel they  
have one.

Whether to do away with write-in voting is an important choice that  
must be made by the voter, not the Legislature.  Let’s hope Sacramento  
makes the right call and preserves this fundamental right of democracy.



http://electionlawblog.org/?p=28782



------------------------------------

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