NewsCalifornia voter ID initiative clears signature threshold, setting up November showdown with...

California voter ID initiative clears signature threshold, setting up November showdown with Newsom

Democrats blast SAVE Act as ‘Jim Crow’ voter ID bill

Michigan congressional candidate Amir Hassan weighs in as Democratic lawmakers, including Sen. Chuck Schumer and Gov. Gavin Newsom, criticize the SAVE Act as racist and a ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ voter suppression tactic.

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A petition to require voter ID and allow only U.S. citizens to vote has gained momentum in California and surpassed the required 875,000-signature threshold to qualify for the November ballot, the group leading the effort said.

According to Reform California, a nonpartisan political activism group, organizers submitted the “California Voter ID Initiative” petition to county authorities with 1.3 million signatures. The group says the petition has garnered bipartisan support, with signatures from Californians representing all walks of life and political persuasions across all 58 of the state’s counties.

Reform California believes the measure has a solid path to passage in November, citing polls showing 71% of Californians favor the initiative. If passed, the measure would bypass the Democratic legislative supermajority and amend the state constitution to require voter ID when casting a ballot, require election officials to verify the citizenship of registered voters and require the state to maintain accurate voter rolls.

“Polling overwhelmingly shows a supermajority consensus for voter ID requirements,” said state Assembly Member Carl DeMaio, a Republican who serves as chair of Reform California.

A split image of the California flag and a voting location

If passed, the California Voter ID Initiative would bypass the Democratic legislative supermajority and amend the state constitution to require voter ID when casting a ballot, require election officials to verify the citizenship of registered voters and require the state to maintain accurate voter rolls. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images; Emily Elconin/REUTERS)

“It’s common sense,” DeMaio said. “If you need an ID to board an airplane or buy a pack of cigarettes or buy a case of beer, you should make it pretty easy to use an ID to vote in an election. This is not hard, it’s not rocket science, it’s quite simple.”

In a press release announcing the signatures would be submitted, DeMaio framed the California Voter ID Initiative as “a common-sense and bipartisan way to restore the trust and confidence all voters should have in our election system.”

He said that nearly half of the 1.35 million signatures came from Democrats and independents. Despite this, DeMaio predicted that “divisive politicians with partisan agendas will try to politicize this effort.”

“Our measure simply holds government officials accountable to maintain accurate voter lists and verify the identity of individuals casting ballots in our elections,” he went on, noting that “other states that have implemented voter ID programs have seen an increase in participation in their elections — including an increase in minority voting.”

Opponents, however, claim the initiative is designed to suppress voters.

Julia Gomez, senior staff attorney for ACLU of Southern California,

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