CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“RECALLS WILL SOON GET HARDER TO
PULL OFF”
California’s
almost exclusively Democratic state legislators got a good look last summer at
just how precarious their positions now are, and they didn’t like it.
The
result almost certainly will be quick changes in state laws covering recall
elections. You can bet Gov. Gavin Newsom would sign off on such bills with
alacrity if he got the chance. But he won’t, because recalls are written into
the California constitution and their structure can’t change without a popular
vote during a general election, next one coming up in autumn 2022.
There’s a
strong possibility the Legislature will put two or three measures before the
people next fall, just to make sure at least one passes.
For as
threatened as Newsom felt last fall before beating back the recall then aimed at
him, many lawmakers felt much the same. One state senator, Josh Newman of
Fullerton, has actually been recalled, only to win back his seat later. Others
know they could be.
That’s
because recalls now require signatures from only 12 percent as many voters as
cast ballots in the last statewide election. In Newsom’s case, it was about 1.3
million, achieved only because a judge gave recall proponents four months more
than usual to gather names after they argued the COVID-19 pandemic posed
unusual obstacles.
Legislators
could be forgiven for believing recall backers in their own districts might gin
up some unusual obstacle during almost any year, and also get extra time.
No one
claims recall elections are the epitome of democracy. For one thing, it only
takes 12 percent of the voters being sufficiently disgruntled to force a vote
in the midst of any elected official’s term. For another, the recall target can
draw more votes than anyone on the ballot’s list of potential replacements, but
still be voted out if there’s a simple majority on the question of whether
there should in fact be a recall.
So among
the changes under consideration for next year’s ballot is one that would
separate by days or weeks the vote on a recall from balloting on a replacement.
Another would eliminate the replacement list in gubernatorial recalls and give
the governor’s job to the lieutenant governor if a governor is recalled, as
Gray Davis was in 2003.
Other
proposals include giving recall organizers less time to gather signatures or
requiring up to twice as many signatures for a recall as today’s rules demand.
The
Legislature’s few Republicans, of course, oppose all this. Never mind that they
would surely turn around quickly if they ever again elect a governor from their
party, which now has barely half as many registered adherents as Democrats do.
Some of
those Republicans point out that only 11 of 179 recall attempts against state
officials since the possibility began in 1911 have actually reached a vote. But
two of those votes, both against sitting governors, came within the last 18
years.
“This is
the last bastion of checks and balances we offer voters,” said GOP Assemblyman
Kelly Seyarto, a former mayor of Murietta. Making the process harder, he
claimed, “would have a chilling effect for voters.”
Added Orrin
Heatlie, the main proponent of the Newsom recall, as he protested outside a
legislative hearing, “The ability to recall is extremely difficult now, and to
try and further complicate the process and make it more difficult for the
people to exercise their rights works in (politicians’) favor.”
Those
sentiments won’t stop the Democratic tide pushing for change. Not while most
Democrats believe, as moderate Democratic state Sen. Steve Glazer of Orinda
observed, that recalls can turn into “a backdoor for the losing side in an
election to relitigate the results.”
He notes
California is one of only 19 states allowing recalls at all, but demands among
the fewest petition signatures. Compared to the 12 percent of previous votes
needed to get a recall going here, it’s 40 percent in Kansas.
There’s
little doubt about the undemocratic nature of recalls, but Seyarto is
nevertheless correct when he says recalls are a last-gasp outlet for unhappy
voters.
This
doesn’t mean changing an election outcome should be as easy as it is now, but
it also doesn’t mean the bar should be raised to impossible levels.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now
available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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