Measure Would Restore Public Trust and Confidence in Elections – and Fulfils Condition Imposed by President Trump
In the wake of President Trump demanding passage of a Voter ID requirement in California, today Assemblymembers Carl DeMaio (R-75) and Bill Essayli (R-63) announced they are introducing the California Voter ID and Election Integrity Act of 2025 (AB 25) to fulfill that requirement and enhance election integrity in the State of California.
If enacted, the bill would require: Voter ID for in-person and mail-in ballots; citizenship verification and accurate maintenance of voter lists by each county; enhanced ballot signature review requirements; and imposing penalties on counties if they don’t finish counting their ballots within 72 hours of the election.
“There is a cancer growing in our democracy where too many California voters do not trust in our elections. California voters will not have the confidence they deserve that we have fraud-free elections — until we enact this common sense voter ID law.” – CA State Representative Carl DeMaio
“The California Voter ID and Election Integrity Act of 2025 will help restore confidence in our system by requiring election integrity reforms that will increase the security, speed, and accuracy of reporting in the future. We call on our colleagues to set aside partisanship and join us in adopting these common-sense steps that a majority of Californians agree on.” – CA State Representative Bill Essayli (Vice Chair, Assembly Elections Committee)
The California Voter ID and Election Integrity Act of 2025 (AB 25) would specifically enact the following:
- Voter ID Requirement: Provide language requiring a government-issued ID to vote (Driver’s License) in person – and use of last 4 digits of Drivers License on Mail-in Ballots
- Accountability for Citizenship Verification: Provide language requiring a verification of citizenship before adding an individual to voter rolls – and verification of existing voter registrations. Verification cannot be a person’s own attestation – but must be proven by appropriate identification documentation to prove they are a US Citizen.
- Accountability for Maintaining Accurate Voter Lists: Provide language requiring the state auditor conduct a random sample of voter lists for a county to ensure at least 98% accuracy on the list – identifying any individuals that are not citizens, deceased, moved out of state, moved from address, etc as inaccuracies. Any county that fails to meet this standard may not automatically mail ballots to everyone on their voter list for that election cycle, but may provide mail-in ballots to individuals who request them.
- Accountability for Timely Counting of Ballots: Provide language suspending a county’s ability to automatically use mail ballots for the following election if they do not count all mail-in ballots within 72 hours of the election – not counting provisional ballots and ballots rejected due to signature mismatch. Counties that lose the ability for an all-mail in election shall still provide mail-in ballots to individuals that request them.
- Integrity of Signature Review Process: Provide language requiring the state auditor to audit using random sample the signature reviews of county election offices to ensure proper vetting of signatures occurs and to report findings of audit within 90 days of each election. For any county office that fails an audit of their signature reviews, that county Registrar of Voters shall submit a remediation plan to the Secretary of State for improvements.
Following the November 2024 election, California’s month-long election process was displayed to the entire country, and the significant delays to counting and reporting on election results exposed weaknesses of and undermined public trust and confidence in the system. DeMaio and Essayli say their proposal fixes the problems and should be enacted on a bipartisan basis given the importance of restoring election integrity to ensure the health of our democracy.
>> READ: Full Text of the Bill
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