Voters drop off their ballots at the outdoor polling station at San Francisco City Hall on Super Tuesday 2020. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters

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After the electoral hammering the California Republicans took in 2018, the party decided to put aside any misgivings it had about “ballot harvesting” and set up their own operation.

In so going, they’ve now earned themselves a cease-and-desist letter from California’s Democratic secretary of state.

At issue: A series of unofficial ballot drop boxes that state Republicans purchased and set up at conservative churches, party headquarters, gun shops and other likely Republican voter haunts across the state. Some of the drop boxes, first reported on in detail by the Orange County Register, were affixed with signs labeling them “Official Ballot Dropbox.”

With all active registered voters due to receive a ballot in the mail this election, Californians can cast their vote by mail, in person or at secure drop boxes. State law requires counties to set up a certain number of these drop boxes based on the size of the county.

These makeship GOP collection points are not among them.

State GOP spokesperson Hector Barajas said the “statewide” ballot box operation was fully consistent with the state law that allows for third-party ballot collection.

“We didn’t write the rules. The Democrats wrote the rules,” he said. “They set up the chessboard. We are just playing with the chessboard that they put in front of us. And now they’re upset about it.”

They are indeed.

This afternoon, California Secretary of State Alex Padilla and Attorney General Xavier Becerra, both Democrats, warned the California Republicans to immediately decommission their drop boxes.

In a press conference, the two officials made the following arguments:

  • Under state law, only counties have the legal authority to set up drop boxes for ballots.
  • If a third party is charged with delivering a ballot on behalf of someone else, the voter has to know who that person is and both have to sign the ballot envelope to establish a paper trail.
  • Describing an unofficial ballot box as “official” may constitute impersonating an elections officer, which is a felony.

“We hope that the message goes out loud and clear to anyone who is trying to improperly solicit, obtain and manage a citizen’s vote that they are subject to prosecution,” said Becerra.

Padilla also sent a cease-and-desist letter to the chair of the California Republican Party, Jessica Patterson, along with the county party chairs in Fresno, Orange and Los Angeles where the party’s ballot boxes were reported. The letter demanded that the boxes be removed by day’s end Thursday.

Barajas of the state GOP countered:

  • Just because the law says counties should operate drop boxes doesn’t mean that other organizations can’t also.
  • Even if a third party is supposed to sign a ballot envelope before receiving it, counties are instructed to count the ballot regardless — and there’s no statutory penalty for someone who delivers a ballot without that signature.

“We’re going to continue on, we’re not going to stop our ballot harvesting program,” said Barajas. “We’re not going to allow the Secretary of State to suppress the vote.”

Brandon Stracener, research fellow at the California Constitution Center at UC Berkeley, said some of the debate falls into a legal “gray area” which hinges on whether something that isn’t explicitly prohibited might still be allowed.

But in cases where a ballot box was labeled “official,” he said the fraud charge is a bit more clear cut.

“I would not want to be your criminal defense attorney defending a prosecution where you slapped ‘official ballot box’ on the side of a filing cabinet,” he said. “Whether that means someone needs to be prosecuted, I don’t know. But I think it justifies the secretary of state and the (attorney general) saying ‘knock if off.’”

As of 2016, California election law allows voters to entrust someone else to deliver a ballot on their behalf.

It was only after the 2018 election that the implications of the California “ballot harvesting” law dawned on the California political world.

It dawned especially hard on the state GOP, which lost half its state congressional delegation and was reduced to a political afterthought in the Legislature. National Republicans expressed puzzlement and shock at the California practice of legalized ballot gathering. Former House Speaker Paul Ryan called the concept “bizarre” and President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that it should be banned.

But many California conservatives argued that it was time for the state GOP to fight fire with fire.

Padilla said there’s a distinction between delivering a ballot for a fellow union member or a disabled neighbor and inviting voters to place their ballots in an unofficial drop box. In the first case, the voter knows who is receiving the ballot. State law requires a paper record of the chain of custody.

“Are ballot collection activities allowed in the state of California? Yes,” said Padilla. “Both the voter must sign the envelope and the person assisting the voter must sign the envelope. That is lost through these unofficial ballot dropboxes.”

Creating that chain of custody for the ballot is a key part of the law, so someone bears responsibility if ballots are not turned in.

But if harvested ballots lacking chain-of-custody documentation are still considered valid and counted, what kind of requirement is there anyway, asked GOP state Sen. Melissa Melendez on Twitter.

Rick Hasen, an election law expert at University of Irvine, said he couldn’t comment on whether the GOP’s operation was illegal. But he said it does raise profound security concerns.

“As a matter of policy, unofficial drop boxes are a really bad idea,” he said in an email. “Unlike official drop boxes, people could mess with the ballots and there’s no government accountability.”

San Diego Democratic Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez said her experience as a door-knocking labor organizer in San Diego inspired her to author the 2016 law. Each election she said she would regularly encounter at-home healthcare workers unable or unwilling to leave their charges in order to bring their ballots to a nearby mailbox. State law prohibited another person from delivering the ballot on their behalf. The new law allows political organizers, including unions, to efficiently gather and deliver the ballots of housebound or unmotivated voters.

“Who thought this little bill to help your friend to drop off a ballot would lead to this?” Gonzalez said. “If the voter trusts the person they’re handing their ballot, the law was meant to allow that person to then drop it in an official drop box or in the mail. But it wasn’t meant to let people set up a collection box.”

Legal or not, Stracener at the Constitution Center said establishing party-run ballot boxes as a safer alternative to official drop boxes or the United States Postal Service could undermine confidence in the state election system.

“In the context of the president of the United States making all these rambling remarks about nonexistent voter fraud, I think that is nefarious,” he said.

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