Daily Press

NC elections board rejects GOP signature check motion

- By Hannah Schoenbaum

RALEIGH, N.C. — The North Carolina State Board of Elections on Thursday denied a Republican Party request that the board authorize county elections officials to scrutinize signatures on absentee voting documents, citing concerns that the proposal would create unequal standards across counties.

“We’ve got an extraordin­arily secure absentee ballot process now, and to do this would introduce a level of uncertaint­y where some voters might be treated different than other voters depending on how they vote,” Chair Damon Circosta said at Thursday’s board meeting.

Challengin­g the board’s prior guidance discouragi­ng signature matching, the proposal would permit county boards of elections to compare signatures on absentee ballot request forms and return envelopes with the signatures included in voter registrati­on records. The board rejected the request in a 3-2 party-line vote, with three Democrats voting against signature verificati­on and two Republican­s voting in favor.

North Carolina Republican Party Chairman Michael Whatley, calling the board’s decision “misguided,” said party leaders will consider an appeal with the Wake County Superior Court.

“We want to make sure that it’s easy to vote and hard to cheat,” Whatley said. “(Signature verificati­on) is a very common sense tool, and I think it’s inexplicab­le that the board has instructed not only that the boards don’t have to use it, but they can’t use it.”

The Republican Party’s proposal cited a 2020 memo from the board’s Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell, which provided that county boards of elections should accept the signature on an absentee ballot request form if it “appears to be made by the voter or their near relative or legal guardian.” Bell advised that signatures “should not be compared with the voter’s signature on file” because that is not required by state law.

After the GOP submitted its request in May, the board held a written public comment period from June 10 to July 5, receiving more than 8,000 responses.

Supporters of the request urged the board to strengthen election security before the November elections, when a few hundred votes could be the tipping point in several close races. But voting rights advocates warned the proposal could disenfranc­hise disabled and elderly voters whose signatures might have changed since they registered to vote.

“Adding this additional layer, which is just another burden that someone will have to overcome to actually be able to cast their ballot, is being done under the guise of election integrity,” Caroline Fry, interim advocacy director for Democracy NC, said in an interview Wednesday. “It’s essentiall­y double speak for making it harder for some voters to cast a ballot.”

Fry said her 72-year-old mother’s signature looks “drasticall­y different” from when she registered to vote at age 18, parallelin­g the experience­s of other older voters who wrote to the board.

North Carolina has more stringent identifica­tion requiremen­ts than many other states that permit absentee voting. Though state law does not explicitly address signature verificati­on, it requires that all absentee voters fill out their ballots in the presence of two witnesses or a notary.

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