| DAVID T. McDONALD and RONALD TARO SUYEMATSU; SANFORD
SIDELL; BRENT CAMPBELL; and HILLARY DENDY, Petitioner-Electors,
and WASHINGTON STATE DEMOCRATIC CENTRAL COMMITTEE,
Petitioners,
v.
SECRETARY OF STATE SAM REED; KING COUNTY RECORDS, ELECTIONS AND
LICENSING SERVICES DIVISION and DEAN LOGAN, ITS DIRECTOR; FRANKLIN
COUNTY AUDITOR; PEND OREILLE COUNTY AUDITOR; and PIERCE COUNTY AUDITOR
as representatives of WASHINGTON STATE COUNTY AUDITORS AND CANVASSING
BOARDS,
Respondents,
and
DINO ROSSI, a Washington Citizen and Elector, WASHINGTON STATE
REPUBLICAN PARTY, an unincorporated association,
Intervenor- Respondents. |
NO. 7 6 3 2 1 - 6 OPINION ORDER |
By a petition invoking this court’s mandamus jurisdiction
and a statute entitled “Prevention and correction of election
frauds and errors,” RCW 29A.68.011, various electors and the
Washington State Democratic Central Committee seek an order directing
Secretary of State Sam Reed to promulgate “uniform standards”
for the manual recount now taking place in the Washington State
election for Governor. Their Motion and Brief in Support of Emergency
Partial Relief specifies that three such sets of standards are being
sought:
(1) standards that ensure that all ballots rejected
in previous counts are fully canvassed so that the hand recount
produces as complete and accurate a tabulation as possible; (2)
standards for evaluating previously-rejected signatures according
to the more liberal standards applied in most counties; and (3)
standards that allow party representatives to meaningfully witness
the hand recount, by observing all actual ballots being counted.
Petitioners thus argue that, contrary to current practice, in a
manual recount election workers and canvassing boards must consider
anew all ballots previously left uncounted, in keeping with their
statutory duty to count all votes cast or each ballot cast, though
their argument mainly focuses on rejections made on the basis that
absentee and provisional ballot signatures do not match with signatures
on file. They seem to suggest that this is necessary in part because
King County improperly refused to permit voters to protest the decision
not to count their ballots on November 17, 2004, the date the election
results were certified. Petitioners further suggest that, contrary
to the election statutes, including a statute that requires the
Secretary to promulgate uniform election rules, the various counties
now employ disparate tests and procedures for comparing signatures,
with King County having a greater rejection rate than other counties
that is statistically significant. And they suggest that the procedures
in place for witnessing the recount are contrary to law, and that
such witnesses must be given “a meaningful opportunity to
be heard before erroneous government action finally disenfranchises
a voter.”
This court is mindful that it is the policy of the State of Washington
“to encourage every eligible person to register to vote and
to participate fully in all elections.” RCW 29A.04.205. “No
right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice
in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good
citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory
if the right to vote is undermined.” Wesberry v. Sanders,
376 U.S. 1, 17, 84 S.Ct. 526, 11 L. Ed. 2d 481 (1964). Nonetheless,
we must reject petitioners’ arguments.
In this context, a “ballot” is a physical or electronic
record of the choices of an individual voter, or the physical document
on which the voter’s choices are to be recorded. RCW 29A.04.008(1)(c),(d).
“‘Recount’ means the process of retabulating ballots
and producing amended election returns….” RCW 29A.04.139
(emphasis added). The procedure for recounts is set forth in RCW
29A.64.041, and starts with the county canvassing board opening
“the sealed containers containing the ballots to be recounted.”
See RCW 29A.60.110. Thus, under Washington’s statutory scheme,
ballots are to be “retabulated” only if they have been
previously counted or tallied, subject to the provisions of RCW
29A.60.210.
It follows that this court cannot order the Secretary to establish
standards for the recanvassing of ballots previously rejected in
this election. And petitioners’ call for uniform signature-checking
standards (seemingly beyond the statutory require-ment that the
signature on an absentee ballot be the same as the signature in
voter registration files) is beyond the relief that can be afforded
in this action.1 Petitioners suggest
in their reply brief that a claimed disparity in signature-checking
standards implicates equal protection concerns under the privileges
and immunities clause of our state constitution, CONST. art. I,
§ 19, but they claim no discriminatory intent. We are mindful
that King County rejected a higher percentage of signatures than
did other counties, but the record before us does not establish
the reason for this disparity, and it could be for factors other
than the standard employed.2 We
do not take petitioners’ argument to suggest that a claimed
disparity in rejection rates of voter signatures triggers some independent
right, constitutional or otherwise, to a recanvassing of rejected
ballots under a newly developed standard, nor does such an argument
come to mind.
Petitioners also seem to suggest that recanvassing of rejected
ballots is necessary because the methods employed by King County
to allow voters to rehabilitate rejected absentee and provisional
ballots run afoul of Washington’s statutory and regulatory
scheme. But we find no support for this notion. We note that the
county gave absentee voters who failed to sign their ballot affidavits
until 4:30 p.m. on November 16, 2004, the day before certification,
to sign and return the affidavits, in accordance with WAC 434-240-235.
And although this regulation does not require as much, the county
likewise permitted absentee voters with problem signatures until
4:30 p.m. on November 16 to provide an updated signature. The county’s
procedure for handling signature problems with respect to provisional
ballots, which also specified a deadline of 4:30 p.m. on November
16, appears to comport with pertinent regulations and federal law,
and petitioners do not persuasively suggest otherwise. Although,
as petitioners point out, RCW 29A.60.190(1) provides that the election
results should include absentee ballots postmarked on or before
the date of the election and received on or before the date of certification,
this statute does not address how ballots rejected for missing or
invalid signatures are to be handled.
As for petitioners’ request that we order the Secretary to
promulgate “standards that allow party representatives to
meaningfully witness the hand recount,” we are not convinced
that such standards are presently lacking. RCW 29A.64.041 provides
that the recount may be observed by persons representing the candidates,
that these witnesses may make no record of the names, addresses,
or information on the ballots, poll books, or applications for absentee
ballots unless authorized by the superior court, and that the Secretary
or county auditor may limit the number of observers to not less
than two on each side if, in his or her opinion, a greater number
would cause undue delay or disruption of the recount process. Petitioners
provide no support for their suggestion that witnesses or observers
are participants who have a right to be heard and influence this
manual recount process.
For the foregoing reasons, we reject petitioners’ arguments
and deny their petition for mandamus and request for relief under
RCW 29A.68.011. |