California’s vote-counting process often stretches for days or even weeks after Election Day as election workers verify signatures, process mailed ballots and tabulate millions of votes cast throughout the state.
California’s vote-counting process often stretches for days or even weeks after Election Day as election workers verify signatures, process mailed ballots and tabulate millions of votes cast throughout the state. Credit: Miguel Gutierrez Jr. / CalMatters photo

[Noozhawks note: We republish news articles and commentaries from CalMatters on state and local policy issues that affect Santa Barbara County readers.]

In the immediate days after last week’s primary election, the vast community of right-wing bloggers, X users, podcasters and YouTube influencers trumpeted that California, the state they love to hate, was turning red.

Early reports of vote-counting in the top-two primary had Republican Steve Hilton, a British-born former Fox News commentator, leading the pack of 61 candidates for governor.

Meanwhile, Republican Spencer Pratt was running second in the race for mayor of Los Angeles, having aired a string of artificial intelligence-generated parodies of Mayor Karen Bass.

As the count continued, Pratt dropped into third place.

As of Monday, Hilton still stood in second place behind Democratic frontrunner Xavier Becerra, but his lead over billionaire Tom Steyer had narrowed to about 5 percentage points, and the outcome was still uncertain.

Meanwhile, the right-wing media gaggle evolved from jubilation to complaints about how long it was taking to count the votes and allegations, without evidence, that fraud was being committed.

They were joined by President Donald Trump, who, in an interview aired Sunday on NBC’s Meet the Press, accused California officials of “cheating,” citing the protracted ballot count.

“Do you have evidence to support that?” interviewer Kristen Welker asked Trump.

“All I have to do is look,” he replied.

“But, sir, that’s not evidence,” Welker persisted. “That’s how they count the votes in California.”

“No, they’re crooked … just like you’re crooked,” Trump shot back. “Your press is crooked and Meet the Press is crooked.

“You’re either crooked or you’re stupid,” he continued. “You know that these elections are rigged. Your network knows that they’re rigged.”

“A true fix would focus more squarely on the counting process itself, seeking to tighten it up without disenfranchising voters.”

Finally, Trump decided to “call it quits,” removed his microphone, and told Welker, “Thank you, darling, have a good time.”

With Trump setting the tone, the social media warriors will continue beating the baseless election fraud drum.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., took a swipe on Monday, saying that “everybody knows instinctively something is wrong.”

On Friday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli posted on X that federal prosecutors were working with the FBI on “multiple election fraud investigations,” but provided no specifics.

Counting votes in California does take a lot of time, a syndrome rooted in decades of efforts by dominant Democrats to increase the numbers of ballots cast.

They depict it as enhancing the democratic process, but also believe that it will help them prevail in close elections.

That’s not cheating, but it is certainly partisan motivation, and it began after Democrats suffered a series of setbacks in legislative elections in the late 1970s.

To stop the hemorrhage, Democrats gerrymandered legislative and congressional districts after the 1980 census and made it much easier for voters to use so-called absentee ballots to vote by mail.

Ironically, however, they failed to capitalize in the 1982 elections, while Republicans used it to very narrowly elect Attorney General George Deukmejian as governor — even though pre-election polls indicated he would lose to Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley.

Democrats continued to expand voter rolls and turnout with automatic voter registration through the Department of Motor Vehicles and allowing Election Day registration.

The 2016 Voter Choice Act made in-person voting more difficult by reducing voting sites while encouraging mail voting.

“Since the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, the state mails every voter a ballot by default,” Eric McGhee of the Public Policy Institute of California and Mindy Romero of USC’s Center for Inclusive Democracy pointed out in a recent guest commentary for CalMatters.

“All the extra process for mailed ballots now applies to nearly twice the volume as in 2018. 

“Signatures must be checked for each ballot to ensure the correct person submitted it. This is an election security measure meant to instill the confidence in elections that critics of the slow count say they want.

“A true fix would focus more squarely on the counting process itself, seeking to tighten it up without disenfranchising voters.”

Ironically then, California’s efforts to verify the legitimacy of ballots lengthen the count, which then leads to allegations that the count is being manipulated.

This commentary was originally published on CalMatters and is reposted with permission. Click here to sign up for CalMatters newsletters.

Award-winning CalMatters columnist Dan Walters has been covering California politics, economics, and social and demographic trends from Sacramento since 1975. He is the author of The New California: Facing the 21st Century and co-author of The Third House: Lobbyists, Money and Power in Sacramento. The opinions expressed are his own.