SACRAMENTO, Calif._No other state in the nation had as many voters show up for last week's midterm elections as California. Preliminary data show that about 12 million ballots were cast _ some in races that produced razor-thin outcomes, the kind that fuel talk about a recount in other states.
But not in California.
Here, a recount is rare. A review of election records and news archives finds only about a half-dozen recounts in legislative, congressional or statewide contests since 1980.
Other states have rules that automatically trigger recounts in close races. Florida, in the national spotlight after new accusations of election mismanagement left two statewide contests in doubt, requires a recount if two candidates' votes are within a half percentage point of each other. Eighteen other states mandate new counts in similar or slightly tighter elections.
Those rules, though, seem quite generous when compared to some of California's closest contests. In 2014, the final result in the primary for state controller showed a difference of only 481 votes out of 1,755,909 cast, giving Democrat Betty Yee victory over former Assembly Speaker John A. Perez, also a Democrat. In 2002, the general election for the office ended with former Controller Steve Westly eking out a 0.25 percentage point victory.
Perez wanted a recount, and he got one _ because his campaign paid for it. California law allows not only candidates, but also "any voter" willing to put up the money to file "a written request for a recount of the votes cast" in a local or a statewide race. Missing is a requirement that the vote tally be close. The law is silent on that issue.
The decision of which votes to review is solely up to the person who asks for the recount. Perez chose communities where he thought his candidacy had been strongest. But under mounting pressure from his fellow Democrats, he called off the process after less than a week.
In 2012, a wealthy supporter of a tobacco tax ballot measure paid for a partial recount of precincts in Los Angeles County but soon abandoned the effort. The initiative lost by 24,076 votes statewide. Cost was a factor in these and other aborted efforts, and cost estimates for a full statewide recount have often been pegged at $2 million or higher, though the money is refunded by the state if the outcomes of the recounted races change.
What standard is used? "On recount, ballots may be challenged for incompleteness, ambiguity, or other defects," state election law says. The elections officer in charge will make a judgment "as he or she believes proper" about any given ballot.
Where California really stands out, though, is the subjective process with which votes are reviewed. The recount requester can go precinct by precinct in search of votes and the opposing side can then ask for a review of votes cast elsewhere. That's worrisome enough in a local race for the Legislature or a regional race for Congress, and even worse in a statewide race on major topics such as taxation and criminal justice _ or in a race for governor.
The Yee-Perez contest led to the enactment of a state law that allows the governor to order a state-funded recount in similarly close races that affect all Californians. Even so, there remains no mandate for a recount in a close race. The week ended with several legislative and congressional races separated by very small numbers of votes.. The candidates who come out on the short end of the final count won't be able to rely on automatic review. They'll have to decide based on their gut and their bank accounts.