BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                      



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          |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                  SB 1272|
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                                 THIRD READING


          Bill No:  SB 1272
          Author:   Kehoe (D)
          Amended:  As introduced
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE ELECTIONS & CONST. AMEND. COMM.  :  5-0, 4/19/12
          AYES:  Correa, La Malfa, De Le�n, Gaines, Lieu

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  Senate Rule 28.8


           SUBJECT  :    Political party organization:  county central 
          committees

           SOURCE  :     Author


           DIGEST  :    This bill (1) deletes the requirement that 
          county central committee members of the Democratic Party of 
          California, the California Republican Party, the American 
          Independent Party of California, and the Peace and Freedom 
          Party be elected at every statewide direct primary election 
          and instead only permits those members to be elected at 
          every presidential primary election, and (2) provides that 
          a county central committee of those parties noted above, in 
          accordance with the rules and regulations adopted by their 
          respective committee, may select its members at any time by 
          holding a caucus or convention, or by using any other 
          method of selection approved by the committee.

           ANALYSIS  :    Existing law establishes the political party 
          organization of the Democratic Party of California, the 
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          California Republican Party, the American Independent Party 
          of California, and the Peace and Freedom Party of 
          California.  Existing law requires the members of a county 
          central committee of each of those parties be elected in 
          each county at every statewide direct primary election.

          This bill deletes the requirement that county central 
          committee members be elected at every statewide direct 
          primary election and instead only permits those members to 
          be elected at every presidential primary election. 

          This bill also specifies that a county central committee of 
          any of the parties noted above, in accordance with the 
          rules and regulations adopted by their respective 
          committee, may select its members at any time by holding a 
          caucus or convention, or by using any other method of 
          selection approved by the committee.

           Background
           
          County central committees and county councils are 
          non-public offices comprised of members of political 
          parties who are involved in party fund-raising and 
          candidate-endorsement activities.  County elections 
          officials are required to conduct elections for these 
          non-public offices in all direct primary elections.

          Unlike other candidates, county central committee/county 
          council candidates do not pay filing fees.  The cost of 
          their elections is completely subsidized by county 
          government.  According to a survey conducted by the San 
          Diego County Registrar of Voters, in the June 2008 Primary 
          Election, county central committee/county council costs 
          reported by 20 of the 58 counties totaled $2.8 million 
          statewide. 

          Existing law requires the central committees of the 
          American Independent, Democratic, Republican, and Peace and 
          Freedom parties be elected at every statewide direct 
          primary election (two year intervals).  The California 
          Association of Clerks and Election Officials states that, 
          until recently, the state had a "modified open" primary 
          election system that restricted voters to the ballot of the 
          party with which they chose to affiliate.  Under the 

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          "modified open" primary, only those voters who were not 
          affiliated with a qualified political party were able to 
          select the ballot of any party which allowed them to 
          participate.  No party allowed unaffiliated voters to 
          participate in their county central committee and county 
          council elections.   Counties printed a separate ballot for 
          voters in each political party. 

          In June 2010, voters adopted the "Top Two" primary election 
          system, which essentially eliminates separate partisan 
          primary elections at the state level.  Under this new 
          system, all voter-nominated (formerly called "partisan") 
          contests will appear on a single ballot, and voters will be 
          able to select candidates regardless of the voter's or the 
          candidate's political party affiliation.  County elections 
          officials are studying the effects of the "Top Two" primary 
          election system, and most counties estimate they will 
          require at least one, and in many cases two, extra ballots 
          unless central committee and county council contests are 
          eliminated from the ballot.  In the June 5, 2012 Primary 
          Election, Democrats will allow nonpartisan voters to 
          participate in their presidential primary but not in the 
          central committee contest.  This necessitates a separate 
          ballot for nonpartisan voters who are entitled to vote in 
          the Democratic presidential primary but not the Democratic 
          central committee contests.  In the 2014 primary, the 
          effect of central committees will be even more pronounced 
          because it is the only partisan contest in the election.  
          All voters will receive a generic ballot except those 
          permitted to vote in central committee contests, who will 
          receive an additional ballot.  If all voters in parties 
          that generally have central committee contests received 
          this ballot-roughly 7.5 million Democrats and 5.3 million 
          Republicans-the printing cost alone will be $3.6 million.

          By moving central committee elections to presidential 
          primaries, counties will not have to print partisan, party 
          specific ballots for gubernatorial primary elections.

           Comments
           
          According to the author's office, existing law specifies 
          various procedures for conducting County Central Committee 
          elections for specified political parties:  the American 

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          Independent, Democratic, Peace and Freedom, and Republican 
          parties.  This bill seeks to amend the frequency by which 
          counties must conduct those elections.  The sole subject of 
          this bill is the frequency by which central committee 
          elections must occur.  Elections Code provides that country 
          central committee members for each of the four parties 
          mentioned above shall be elected in each county at every 
          statewide direct primary election.  The effect of that 
          provision is to require county central committee elections 
          every two years, but that provision has proved costly for 
          counties.  Although this bill specifies that publicly 
          funded ballot elections for central committee members will 
          happen every four years instead of every two years, parties 
          may still opt to have two-year central committee member 
          terms by selecting membership using internal party 
          procedures outside of the public election process.  
          Political parties have statutory authority to opt not to 
          use the state elections process to select their central 
          committee members.  
          In Wilson v. San Luis Obispo County Democratic Central 
          Committee (2009), the Second District California Court of 
          Appeal affirmed that political parties have the right to 
          select central committee members using internal 
          machinations that do not involve publicly funded ballot 
          elections.  This bill is a measure that seeks to provide 
          counties with fiscal relief by reducing the taxpayer funded 
          costs associated with political party central committee 
          elections.  Although the inclusive amount of cost savings 
          to taxpayers is unknown, any measure that seeks to provide 
          fiscal relief to cash strapped local governments is timely 
          and necessary.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes   
          Local:  No

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  5/4/12)

          Alpine County Clerk
          California Association of Clerks and Election Officials 
          Contra Costa County Clerk
          Santa Cruz County Clerk/Elections
          Secretary of State
          Shasta County Clerk/Registrar of Voters


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          DLW:kc  5/8/12   Senate Floor Analyses 

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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