Bill, which could shut down Huntington Beach's voter ID requirements, passes California Assembly (2024)

Huntington Beach was full of election-related news this week, as the Nov. 5 general election nears.

The California Assembly passed Senate Bill 1174 on Tuesday, which would ban local governments from imposing voter identification requirements in municipal elections.

The bill, which passed 57-16, now moves to the desk of Gov. Gavin Newsom. It was passed by the state Senate in May.

The bill is directly at odds with Huntington Beach’s Measure A, which states the city could implement voter ID requirements beginning with the 2026 election. State Atty. General Rob Bonta and Secretary of State Shirley Weber subsequently sued the city, after Measure A passed in March, stating that it conflicted with — and was preempted by — state law.

In a statement, state Sen. David Min (D-Irvine) said SB 1174, which he authored, makes it clear that election integrity and voter identification requirements are exclusively up to the state.

“We cannot have 100 different charter cities making up 100 different sets of voting rules, based on fringe conspiracy theories,” Min said. “I have repeatedly told the Huntington Beach City Council members pushing this issue that if they were to produce any evidence of widespread voter fraud, I would lead efforts to change California’s voter eligibility rules. They have not produced any such evidence. I am grateful to my colleagues for their overwhelming support for this bill, and I am hopeful that the governor will sign SB 1174 into law later this year.”

Huntington Beach City Atty. Michael Gates has argued that the city’s charter city status allows it to control local elections as it sees fit. He has also said that a new bill like SB 1174 wouldn’t be necessary if voter ID laws were already illegal, as Bonta asserted.

Bill, which could shut down Huntington Beach's voter ID requirements, passes California Assembly (1)

Former Huntington Beach Mayor Debbie Cook speaks at a City Council meeting last year.

(Screen capture by Matt Szabo)

Judge agrees with former Huntington Beach mayor, strikes Measure U argument

An Orange County Superior Court Judge issued an order Wednesday striking an entire rebuttal paragraph from the Huntington Beach Measure U item on the ballot.

Judge Kimberly Knill agreed with the petitioner — former Huntington Beach Mayor Debbie Cook — that an argument used by proponents of the proposed charter amendment should be removed.

Measure U is a proposed charter amendment that, if passed, would require Surf City voters to approve any zoning changes that an environmental impact report shows would present “significant and unavoidable” negative impacts to the environment.

In the argument supporting the measure, Mayor Gracey Van Der Mark, Mayor Pro Tem Pat Burns and Councilman Casey McKeon said claims that the measure would result in “increased red tape and additional costs” were not true. They wrote that there was no additional cost to put zoning changes on the ballot, “just like there was no additional cost to the fruitful fight against the state over high-density housing mandates, the city for successfully withdrawing from the OCPA at no cost, and adopting a Voter ID requirement at no cost.”

But Knill ordered that paragraph deleted from the rebuttal argument.

Cook, who served two terms on the City Council and was mayor in 2002 and 2008, issued a statement following the judge’s ruling.

“Elected city leaders should not be allowed to lie to the public,” she said. “The claim by council members Van Der Mark, McKeon and Burns that their counterproductive actions — pushing risky and costly ballot measures, pursuing wasteful and costly litigation, imposing illegal Voter ID requirements — has no cost, is a lie. There would be huge costs to the city, just like the millions of dollars of unnecessary and wasteful attorneys’ fees and public expenses that they have already cost the city. Truthful ballot arguments are foundational to maintaining a fair democratic process, and I am grateful the court agreed.”

Council candidate’s ballot designation changed

Huntington Beach City Council candidate Chad Williams will not be able to use his proposed ballot designation of “Navy SEAL Speaker,” Orange County Superior Court Judge Craig Griffin ruled Thursday.

Griffin, in his minute order, struck “Navy SEAL” from the ballot designation while allowing Williams, a former Navy SEAL, to keep “speaker.”

The state ballot designation worksheet asks non-incumbent candidates to use their current principal profession(s), vocation(s), or occupation(s), in a maximum total of three words.

Huntington Beach community activist Victor Valladares brought the legal action.

Bill, which could shut down Huntington Beach's voter ID requirements, passes California Assembly (2024)

References

Top Articles
Stories in Topic: Obituaries on ColumbiaMagazine.com
Overtime Megan: Her , Bio, Age, leaked, Net Worth and much more
19 Awesome Things to Do in Redmond, Oregon
Busted Newspaper Pulaski County
Kokomoscanner
D&C Newspaper Obituaries
Tmobile Ipad 10Th Gen
Editado Como Google Translate
Log in or sign up to view
Myud Dbq
Nsu Kpcom Student Handbook
/hypno/ - Hypnofa*ggotry
Kimpton Hotels In Charleston Sc
Hannaford Weekly Flyer Manchester Nh
Bones And All Showtimes Near Tucson Spectrum 18
Omni Id Portal Waconia
The Guardian Crossword Answers - solve the daily Crossword
ZQuiet Review | My Wife and I Both Tried ZQuiet for Snoring
Catholic Church Near Seatac Airport
Newsweek Wordle
My Time Banner Health
Sodexo Northern Portal
Tethrd Coupon Code The Hunting Public
Watch The Lovely Bones Online Free 123Movies
Odawa Hypixel
Miller's Yig
Axolotls for Sale - 10 Online Stores You Can Buy an Axolotl - Axolotl Nerd
Death Valley National Park: The Complete Guide
Meineke Pacific Beach
Craigslist Tampa: Your Ultimate Guide To Online Classifieds
Hartford Healthcare Employee Tools
Ulta Pigeon Forge
Courierpress Obit
Nasenspray - Wirkung, Anwendung & Risiken
Shs Games 1V1 Lol
Ben Rickert Net Worth
Osceola County Addresses Growth with Updated Mobility Fees
Stellaris How To Get Subjugation Casus Belli
Cvs Newr.me
Culver's Flavor Of The Day Little Chute
What is Landshark Beer?
Amazing Lash Bay Colony
Autozone On 7 Mile And Hubbell
Maria Butina Bikini
Kamzz Llc
Stpeach Telegram
Firsthealthmychart
Liberty 1098-T
FINAL FANTASY XI Online 20th Anniversary | Square Enix Blog
Boyle County Busted Newspaper
CareLink™ Personal Software | Medtronic
Signature Learn 365 | airSlate SignNow
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Zonia Mosciski DO

Last Updated:

Views: 6045

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Zonia Mosciski DO

Birthday: 1996-05-16

Address: Suite 228 919 Deana Ford, Lake Meridithberg, NE 60017-4257

Phone: +2613987384138

Job: Chief Retail Officer

Hobby: Tai chi, Dowsing, Poi, Letterboxing, Watching movies, Video gaming, Singing

Introduction: My name is Zonia Mosciski DO, I am a enchanting, joyous, lovely, successful, hilarious, tender, outstanding person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.