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A proposed measure aiming to strengthen voter identification and citizenship verification for Californians has gathered enough signatures to be considered on the November ballot.
This initiative seeks to amend the state constitution, mandating voter ID at polling stations and requiring election officials to confirm the citizenship status of registered voters. Assemblymember Carl DeMaio, the key advocate for this proposal, has initiated a robust campaign to ensure its passage, as noted in a recent press release.
“The California Voter ID Initiative offers a sensible, bipartisan approach to rebuilding trust and confidence in our electoral process,” stated DeMaio on Friday.
To qualify for the ballot, the campaign submitted over 962,000 signatures, as announced by Secretary of State Shirley Weber.

However, the proposal has faced criticism from voting rights organizations, which argue that it could hinder voter access and create unnecessary obstacles.
“This measure is not about safeguarding elections; it’s about creating impediments that could prevent eligible Californians from exercising their fundamental voting rights,” asserted Abdi Soltani, executive director of the ACLU of Northern California, in a statement challenging the voter ID initiative.
However, DeMaio — whose group Reform California launched the voter ID effort — said most voters, even Democrats, support voter ID requirements.
He claimed “nearly half of the 1.35 million signatures we collected to put this common-sense reform on the ballot came from Democrats and Independents.”