Election Law
This week the General Assembly approved legislation that would significantly reform North Carolina's elections processes, particularly when it comes to absentee and early voting.
SB 747: Elections Law Changes passed the House Committee on Election Law and Campaign Finance Reform on Tuesday. During the committee, House Republicans unveiled their version of the bill that had previously passed the Senate. The House version made minor changes to the bill that Democrats recommended. During the House Election Law Committee meeting, and the following House Rules Committee, the bill’s Senate sponsors spoke in agreement with the House changes. The bill passed both the House and Senate on Wednesday in party line votes, 69-47 and 27-18, respectively.
One of the more controversial provisions in the bill would end the grace period that allows mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day to be counted if they arrive at county boards of elections within three days after the election. The bill would require that absentee ballots be received by county election offices by the time in-person voting ends at 7:30 p.m. on the day of the election. Opponents of the bill argued that the end of the grace period leaves voters at the mercy of the Postal Service and disenfranchises voters who cast their ballot on time.
Additionally, the bill would prohibit local elections officials from accepting private donations or in-kind contributions to help run elections. However, Representative Allison Dahle (D-Wake) successfully passed an
amendment on the House floor inserting a carve out to the provision, allowing county boards of elections to accept private donations for ink pens, personal protection equipment, and food and beverages for precinct officials.
Furthermore, the bill empowers partisan observers at polling places, allowing up to three individuals appointed by each political party to take notes in a voting place and listen to certain conversations between voters and election officials. Bill sponsors clarified that precinct judges still have control over voting enclosures and can object to observers, however, many opponents took aim at this provision. In a
joint statement by House Democratic Leader Robert Reives (D-Chatham) and Senate Democratic Leader Dan Blue (D-Wake), both leaders said the provision, “opens the door for voter intimidation at polling places.”
Republicans, however, were unified in their support of the bill’s reforms. “The aim of the bill is to improve our elections,”
argued Representative Gray Mills (R-Iredell), who chairs the House Committee on Elections and Campaign Finance Reform. “All of it aims to make our processes on Election Day, during early voting, mail-in ballots … more efficient and to make it more user-friendly.”
Democratic Governor Roy Cooper is expected to veto the bill. Governor Cooper has previously vetoed three provisions contained in the bill, including the absentee ballot deadline change, when those provisions were included in past bills sent to his desk. In a
statement Wednesday, Governor Cooper called out the legislature for passing bills this week that, “hurts the freedom to vote.”