Joint Informational Hearing:
Discussion of Problems Faced by Voters
at the
2008 Presidential Primary Election
Opening Statement
Senator Ron Calderon, Chair
Senate Committee on Elections,
Reapportionment
and
Constitutional Amendments
________________________________________________
I would now like to call this joint informational hearing to
order.
Good afternoon and thank you for
attending.
I am Senator Ron Calderon, Chair of the Senate Committee on
Elections, Reapportionment and Constitutional Amendments.
Joining me today is:
• Senator Jenny Oropeza, Chair of the
Senate Select Committee on Integrity of Elections;
• Assembly Member Curren
Price, Chair of the Assembly Committee on Elections and Redistricting;
• Senator
Mark Ridley-Thomas; and
• Senator
Dean Florez
On the agenda this afternoon, we will hear from:
• Secretary
of State Debra Bowen
• Elections
officials from both
• As well as
representatives from California Common Cause, the League of Women Voters and
the California Voter Foundation.
I am also looking forward to hearing from many activists and
other individuals under the public testimony portion of the hearing.
The problems that occurred during the primary election have
been well documented in the press – including ballot shortages and an enormous
amount of confusion regarding the ability of decline-to-state
voters to participate in either the Democratic or American Independent
Party primaries.
So much so that when I went to vote at my own precinct in
Unfortunately, we’ll never know how
many voters throughout the state were disenfranchised this way.
As shocking as that sounds, the largest systemic problem
that day was the fiasco in
According to the L.A. County Registrar of Voters, more than
12,000 voters that they know of did not have their votes for president counted
because they failed to complete, or were never informed of this extra
requirement.
This is intolerable and there is simply no excuse for it.
Fortunately, they were able to determine voter intent on
about 48,000 similar ballots but only after being pressured
to do so.
I have asked the L.A. County Registrar for an estimate on
what it cost them to conduct this extra canvass and I will do whatever I can to
make sure that the state does not reimburse them for the costs of mitigating
their own incompetence.
The purpose of today's hearing is to discuss these and other
problems faced by the voters, to assess the steps that elections officials have
taken to avoid these problems in the future, and to help the committees
determine whether any new legislation is necessary to prevent a recurrence of
these problems.
I am especially anxious to hear from the Secretary of State
regarding some ideas she has already shared with me.
Specifically, a centralized system for reporting election
day errors, a public display period for
ballot layouts, and some way to immediately communicate with every polling
place in the state.
Before we proceed with our first witness, would any other members of the committee like to make a statement?