BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó



                                                                    AB 1494


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          CONCURRENCE IN SENATE AMENDMENTS


          AB  
          1494 (Levine)


          As Amended  June 15, 2016


          Majority vote


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          |ASSEMBLY:  |      | (January 27,  |SENATE: |31-8  |(August 1, 2016) |
          |           |      |2016)          |        |      |                 |
          |           |      |               |        |      |                 |
          |           |      |               |        |      |                 |
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                 (vote not relevant)




          Original Committee Reference:  E. & R.


          SUMMARY:  Clarifies that a voter may voluntarily disclose how he  
          or she voted if that voluntary act does not violate any other  
          law.


          The Senate amendments delete the Assembly-version of the bill,  
          and instead specify that a voter may voluntarily disclose how he  
          or she voted if that voluntary act does not violate any other  
          law.


          EXISTING LAW prohibits a voter from showing his or her ballot to  
          any person, after the ballot has been marked, in such a way as  
          to reveal the ballot's contents.









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          AS PASSED BY THE ASSEMBLY, this bill authorized voters to take  
          and share photographs of their marked ballots.


          FISCAL EFFECT:  None.  This bill is keyed non-fiscal by the  
          Legislative Counsel.


          COMMENTS:  According to the author, this bill seeks to uphold  
          the First Amendment right of voters to engage in political  
          speech by expressly allowing voters to voluntarily share their  
          marked ballots.


          California Constitution Article II, Section 7 provides, "Voting  
          shall be secret."  Notably, while this constitutional provision  
          protects the right of a voter to cast a secret ballot, it also  
          reflects distinct state interests in keeping voting secret.   
          Requiring a secret ballot helps protect the integrity of the  
          voting process by making it impossible to verify the votes cast  
          by any single voter, thereby protecting against vote buying  
          schemes and voter intimidation or coercion.


          The California Elections Code contains a number of provisions  
          that are intended to protect the secrecy of voting.  Perhaps  
          most relevant for the purposes of this bill, since at least  
          1891, state law has prohibited a voter from showing his or her  
          ballot to any person in such a way as to reveal the ballot's  
          contents after it has been marked.  This provision can protect a  
          voter from being coerced or intimidated into showing his or her  
          marked ballot, thereby safeguarding the voter's right to cast a  
          secret ballot.  Furthermore, this provision protects against  
          vote buying schemes by prohibiting a voter from providing proof  
          of his or her vote selections.  The Secretary of State's office  
          indicates that they have no records of a voter ever having been  
          prosecuted in the state for showing his or her marked ballot to  
          another person.


          Two recent decisions by federal courts have questioned the  








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          constitutionality of laws that make it illegal for voters to  
          take and share photographs of their marked ballots.  In both  
          cases, states had enacted laws that were specifically designed  
          to prohibit voters from taking photographs or digital images of  
          their ballots and distributing or sharing those images.


          In August 2015, the United States District Court for the  
          District of New Hampshire invalidated a New Hampshire law that  
          prohibits a voter from "taking a digital image or photograph of  
          his or her marked ballot and distributing or sharing the image  
          via social media or by any other means."  In its decision, the  
          court concluded that New Hampshire's law violated the First  
          Amendment rights of voters by imposing "a content-based  
          restriction on speech that deprives voters of one of their most  
          powerful means of letting the world know how they voted."  An  
          appeal of that case is pending in the United States Court of  
          Appeals for the First Circuit.


          In October 2015, the United States District Court for the  
          Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division, enjoined  
          the enforcement of an Indiana law that makes it illegal for a  
          voter to take a digital image or photograph of his or her ballot  
          while in a polling place or other voting location, or to  
          distribute or share such an image by social media or other  
          means.  Much like in the New Hampshire case, the court noted  
          that Indiana had "failed to demonstrate any current, ongoing or  
          actual problem posed by or related to vote buying, much less a  
          problem shown to be based on the use of digital photography to  
          facilitate vote buying."  The court thus concluded that  
          Indiana's law violates the First Amendment of the United States  
          Constitution.


          As approved by the Assembly, this bill explicitly authorized  
          voters to take and share photographs of their marked ballots.   
          The Senate amendments deleted those provisions, and instead  
          clarify that a voter may voluntarily disclose how he or she  
          voted if that voluntary act does not violate any other law.   
          While the Senate amendments take a different approach, both  
          versions of the bill seek to protect the First Amendment rights  








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          of voters to engage in political speech by voluntarily sharing  
          how they voted.  In light of that fact, this bill, as amended in  
          the Senate, is generally consistent with Assembly actions.


          Analysis Prepared by:                                             
                          Ethan Jones / E. & R. / (916) 319-2094  FN:  
          0003465