Nearly 2,000 voter challenges were filed in King County before last fall's election; following considerable public uproar, many were eventually withdrawn.
Now Senate Bill 6362, seeking to clarify voter challenge procedures and sponsored by Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Queen Anne, has cleared the Legislature with a single dissenting vote.
"Many of my constituents felt intimidated by challenges filed so close to the election," Kohl-Welles said. "Some didn't vote because they feared they could be found guilty of fraud. We can't permit such abuses to happen again or anywhere else."
In Kohl-Welles' 36th Legislative District, which includes Magnolia, notices were sent to a sizeable number of residents, some of them in the Watermarke Apartments in Belltown, others living aboard their boats at Shilshole Marina in Ballard.
Kohl-Welles said that many constituents were upset with having their registrations challenged after years of voting with no hitches, and with receiving their notifications only a few days before the election. Others, out of town when letters notifying them of the challenge arrived, were not able to attend a hearing to appeal.
"Kudos to the 36th District Democrats who conducted their own canvass to assess the legitimacy of the challenges and for assuring voters that they should cast their ballots," Kohl-Welles said, adding, "I am grateful, too, to Representative [Toby] Nixon for his assistance in helping to pass this bill so handily." Nixon, a Republican, represents Kirkland (45th Legislative District).
SB 6362 makes a number of changes to the process and timeline for filing voter registration challenges:
* County auditors must publish the entire content of every voter registration challenge on the county's Web site within 72 hours of receipt. Auditors are required to notify anyone who requests to receive such notification.
* A challenger must file a signed affidavit, subject to the penalties of perjury, swearing that to his or her personal knowledge and belief, and having exercised due diligence, that the challenged voter is not qualified to vote based on existing constitutional requirements, or does not reside at the address provided. The challenger must either list the challenged voter's actual address or verify that the challenged voter does not reside at the address. This includes obtaining an affidavit from a person who owns, manages, resides or is employed at the address listed.
* The challenger must supply the factual basis for the challenge in the signed affidavit. A challenge may not be based on unsupported allegations or allegations made by third parties.
* A challenged voter may transfer registration or re-register until the day before the election.
* Only a poll-site judge or inspector may file a challenge on Election Day. Only registrations of voters who present themselves to vote at the poll site are allowed to be challenged.
* Voter-initiated challenges may be filed at any time provided that challenges filed against a voter who registered to vote fewer than 60 days before the election, or who changed residence fewer than 60 days before the election and didn't transfer his or her registration, are filed no later than 10 days before the election or within 10 days of the voter being added to the voter registration base, whichever is later. Challenges initiated against all other voters must be filed no later than 45 days before the election.
* The county auditor must provide notice of the challenge by certified mail to the challenged voter. If the challenge is based on the residential address, the auditor must give notice of exceptions to the residency requirement allowed by the Constitution and by statute, such as nontraditional address and excused absence from the state due to military service, college, prison and navigation of high seas.
* If the challenger fails to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the registration is improper, the challenge must be dismissed and the ballot must be counted.
* A voter who uses a nontraditional address for registration purposes must provide a valid mailing address and must meet the constitutional requirement that he or she has lived in the area for at least 30 days before the election. Motor homes and marinas are added to the existing list of examples of nontraditional addresses, which include shelters and parks.
"Thomas Paine said that 'The right of voting for representatives is the primary right by which other rights are protected,'" Kohl-Welles observed.[[In-content Ad]]