California processes more votes by mail than any other state. Though many states have increased the number of ways that voters can cast a ballot in recent years, the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic has brought an additional sense of urgency to understanding how voters and election administrators actually interact with vote-by-mail regimes. In addition, in 2018, California enacted a new notice and remedy process to allow voters to cure a possible signature mismatch before their vote does not get counted. This article examines the implementation of that regime-the Every Vote Counts Act- A nd analyzes how election officials in the state verify voters' signatures on their mail-in ballots. As states around the country adopt their own or scale up existing vote-by-mail systems in response to the pandemic, California's decades of experience and innovation can serve as a helpful guide to a safe and healthy election in November for voters and policy makers alike.
CITATION STYLE
Janover, W., & Westphal, T. (2020). Signature Verification and Mail Ballots: Guaranteeing Access while Preserving Integrity-A Case Study of California’s Every Vote Counts Act. Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy, 19(3), 321–343. https://doi.org/10.1089/elj.2020.0648
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