Over Half of 2022 Mail-In Ballots Are Still Unaccounted for in California

Over half of all of the mail-in ballots issued for the 2022 midterm elections and primaries in California are still unaccounted for, a nonprofit has revealed.

According to Public Interest Legal Foundation, a conservative nonprofit group based in Indianapolis, Indiana, mail-in voting during the 2022 elections was a disaster.

Including both the primary and the general elections, the new law resulted in the rejection of 226,250 mail-in ballots by state election officials, the report said.

The news follows a major push for mail-in voting from Democrats across the country.

Following the Democrats’ success with mail-in voting during the 2020 election, ostensibly due to the pandemic, California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) signed AB 37 into law the following year.

The law makes vote-by-mail a permanent feature of future elections in the state, whether they are able to vote in person or not.

A so-called “voter integrity” bill, AB 37 allows the state to send a mail-in ballot to every active registered voter.

news release from Newsom’s office said the measure would “increase access to democracy and enfranchise more voters.”

“As states across our country continue to enact undemocratic voter suppression laws, California is increasing voter access, expanding voting options, and bolstering elections integrity and transparency,” the governor said.

In the general election, PILF reported that 47.8 percent of ballots were rejected because they arrived late.

Another 39.8 percent were due to a signature mismatch and 9.8 percent had been submitted without a signature.

Others were rejected because voters were recorded as having already voted (0.6 percent) or had failed to provide an ID (0.5 percent).

In some cases, the ballot was missing entirely from the envelope (0.5 percent).

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Equally concerning, PILF claims that 10 million ballots — over half of the ballots sent out — are still unaccounted for.

PILF provided ballot data for the general election.

The state sent out a total of 22,184,707 ballots.

Of those, 9,781,328 were accepted, 120,432 were rejected, and 1,391,422 voters cast their ballots in person.

This leaves 10,891,525 that remain unaccounted for.

So much for enfranchising more voters.

When one considers how close many of the races in the state ended up, this is especially concerning.

The PILF report included a quote from the group’s president, J. Christian Adams: “Mail ballots disenfranchise.

“There are many reasons mail ballots fail ultimately to count.

“No one casting a ballot at home can correct an error before it’s too late.

“California’s vote-by-mail demonstration should serve as a warning to state legislators elsewhere.”

Perhaps the worst aspect of mail-in voting is that it’s become an invitation for voter fraud.

Many of us recall the 2005 Commission on Federal Election Reform co-chaired former President Jimmy Carter and former U.S. Secretary of State James A. Baker, III, a Republican.

The bipartisan commission concluded, “Absentee ballots remain the largest source of potential voter fraud.”

Unfortunately, it looks like this controversial practice is here to stay.

Democrats have lobbied for universal absentee voting for a long time.

The 2020 pandemic handed them a golden opportunity to implement mail-in voting on an unprecedented scale.

It also opened the door to its close cousins, early voting and ballot harvesting.

And they are not about to let it go as these practices overwhelmingly help Democrats.

This means that if Republicans ever plan to win another election, we need to hop on the bandwagon fast.

Republicans have long supported the tradition of in-person voting on Election Day.

Unfortunately, by then, Democrat candidates who have been getting out the vote for weeks, are way ahead of their Republican rivals.

And Republicans start the day with a serious vote deficit.

We all recall the voting machine issues in the state of Arizona on Election Day.

People were forced to wait in long lines for hours in some cases.

How many of them left because it was just not worth their effort?

Or they simply had other obligations such as work?

In a perfect world, voters would be required to show up on Election Day to cast their ballots.

But that perfect world no longer exists.

We must master vote-by-mail and the other techniques that have worked so well for Democrats in the past few election cycles, or we will continue to lose otherwise winnable races.

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By Frank Bergman

Frank Bergman is a political/economic journalist living on the east coast. Aside from news reporting, Bergman also conducts interviews with researchers and material experts and investigates influential individuals and organizations in the sociopolitical world.

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