GOP Sues to Stop California's Plan For an All-By-Mail General Election

image
Published: 27 May, 2020
3 min read

This article was first published on The Fulcrum

The GOP has sued to prevent the effort to conduct the November election almost entirely by mail in the nation's most populous state as a way to limit the spread of the coronavirus. The lawsuit, filed Sunday in federal court, says Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom exceeded his authority this month by telling county election officials to send all 20.7 million registered Californians a ballot this fall.

His order would potentially double the number of Americans who are provided with absentee ballots automatically, without having to ask for them. That's now the practice across just five states — Colorado, Washington, Oregon, Utah and Hawaii — although state law already allows 14 smaller counties in California to hold elections entirely remotely.

The lawsuit is one of the most aggressive moves at the courthouse yet by the GOP. It has announced plans to spend $20 million on lawyers this year, mainly to defend against the similarly financed push from Democrats and voting rights groups to persuade state and federal judges to ease limits on voting.

It says the governor's "brazen power grab" was not permitted by state law, which puts such rules only in the hands of the Legislature, and violates the Constitution. Newsom says his move is permissible because his job is to protect the public's health even while people are exercising their civic duty.

"We're on firm legal ground," Newsom said, arguing that "public health is a nonpartisan issue."

The new litigation — brought by the Republican National Committee, the state party and the House GOP campaign arm — says the voter fraud that would ensue under Newsom's plan would deprive honest Californians of their constitutional right to vote.

"No State that regularly conducts statewide all-mail elections automatically mails ballots to inactive voters because it invites fraud, coercion, theft, and otherwise illegitimate voting," the suit argues. "Fraudulent and invalid votes dilute the votes of honest citizens and deprive them of their right to vote in violation of the 14th Amendment."

That is the formalized version of the argument President Trump has been making with increasing ferocity — most recently in a series of Memorial Day weekend tweets.

IVP Donate

"The United States cannot have all Mail In Ballots. It will be the greatest Rigged Election in history," the president tweeted Sunday, without offering any justification for his suspicions. "People grab them from mailboxes, print thousands of forgeries and 'force' people to sign. Also, forge names. Trying to use Covid for this Scam!"

There is no evidence of what Trump described, and a range of studies have found no evidence of widespread voter fraud — in elections mainly reliant on the mail or in-person polling places. Part of what GOP operatives lament is that the Democrats have done much better at capitalizing on a state law that permits operatives to gather the completed envelopes of other Californians. They have come up with no evidence, however, to support their suspicions that this so-called ballot harvesting has led to such crimes as completing the ballots of others or destroying ballots collected in GOP precincts.

California's overall political color is deep blue, so Joe Biden can be confident of securing its 55 electoral votes no matter how many people cast ballots. But the GOP, which took a drubbing in the state in the midterm election, has a decent shot at winning back three or four congressional seats — and believes its prospects would be bolstered by a low-turnout election.

One of the state's top House races is a comeback bid by Republican Darrell Issa, who filed a similar suit last week with the help of the conservative advocacy group Judicial Watch.

You Might Also Like

Ballrooms, Ballots, and a Three-Way Fight for New York
Ballrooms, Ballots, and a Three-Way Fight for New York
The latest Independent Voter Podcast episode takes listeners through the messy intersections of politics, reform, and public perception. Chad and Cara open with the irony of partisan outrage over trivial issues like a White House ballroom while overlooking the deeper dysfunctions in our democracy. From California to Maine, they unpack how the very words on a ballot can tilt entire elections and how both major parties manipulate language and process to maintain power....
30 Oct, 2025
-
1 min read
California Prop 50 gets an F
Princeton Gerrymandering Project Gives California Prop 50 an 'F'
The special election for California Prop 50 wraps up November 4 and recent polling shows the odds strongly favor its passage. The measure suspends the state’s independent congressional map for a legislative gerrymander that Princeton grades as one of the worst in the nation....
30 Oct, 2025
-
3 min read
bucking party on gerrymandering
5 Politicians Bucking Their Party on Gerrymandering
Across the country, both parties are weighing whether to redraw congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Texas, California, Missouri, North Carolina, Utah, Indiana, Colorado, Illinois, and Virginia are all in various stages of the action. Here are five politicians who have declined to support redistricting efforts promoted by their own parties....
31 Oct, 2025
-
4 min read