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Abuses of Legislative ‘Ghost Voting’ Are Virtually Always Corrected – By Legislators

towashington 089.gif By Bill Cavala
A veteran of over 30 years in Sacramento

“Ghost Voting”, the practice of one lawmaker voting for another in the California Assembly, regularly makes “news” as an abuse—another malfeasance by politicians.

In fact, abuses of the practice are rare, and the practice itself is both necessary and constant. While the smaller State Senate uses a ‘voice’ vote for its tallies, the Assembly has used a mechanical tote machine since the mid-1930’s. It requires a lawmaker to unlock the buttons on his or her desk and push either the green or red button on each vote. To do so, the lawmaker must remain in or quite near the desk. A Senator can roam the floor and the rear of the Senate chamber in conversations with other Senators and staff and still call out “aye” when his or her name is called.

To free lawmakers up to talk with other lawmakers about bills about to be voted upon and to discuss matters with their staffs in the rear of the Legislative Chamber, it has become customary to allow their seatmate to push their voting button. Most lawmakers have reviewed the upcoming votes prior to the session and have their preference marked on the bill analyses provided by staff (so they don’t have to pay close attention to the debate which is more for the public’s edification than their own). The ‘marked’ analysis is then used by the seatmate to cast the vote of a Member not at his desk. If a mistake is made it can be corrected at the end of session as the Member addresses the Assembly Clerk and orally speaks into the microphone for the public to hear, “on Assembly Bill xx, Member YY, “aye to no”. It is the responsibility of each Member to ensure that he or she is recorded as voting as desired on each bill on each session day.

During the final days of session, when thousands of bills are voted up or down on final passage after having gone through the Committee and Floor processes of both houses of the legislature, the custom is broadened somewhat. While breaks in the proceedings are taken for “caucuses” of each party during which food is served, there are other occasions when Members leave the floor: to go to the restrooms, to return briefly to their offices for a change of clothes or to make some personal calls. To cover these absences from the floor of the Assembly, seatmates are allowed to push the missing Member’s button. (To do otherwise might mean hundreds of bills “on call” – legislation that failed to achieve a majority, not because of opposition, but because of members in the restrooms or elsewhere. Such bills would then have to be taken up a second or third time until sufficient attendance is achieved – a waste of scarce time during a period when the Legislature is meeting into the small hours of the morning).

Such broader “ghost voting” requires that a Member absent from the floor remain in the building so that a mistake made by a seatmate may still be corrected in the usual fashion at the end of the day.

On occasion, however, a Member may leave the building for some event elsewhere and leave his ‘key’ unlocked. Now his or her vote can be cast without the opportunity of the missing member returning and taking final responsibility for the votes recorded in his or her name that day. It is this circumstance which produces virtually all of the media hoopla about ghost voting. Some other Member takes advantage of the absence to cast a vote that may or may not accord with the missing Member’s wishes – and that affects the final outcome of the Legislation.

Does this occur often? No. Each political party has someone responsible for making sure that the custom is followed. A member whose button is pushed during a floor absence has only a finite amount of time to return before an objection will be raised (and the media notified). There have been fewer than a dozen such occurrences in the last decade.

Each time it does occur it provides the Capitol Press Corps with yet another opportunity to castigate “the Legislature” with a story emphasizing the lack of ethics among politicians. Typically the stories then turn to the usual suspects among the good government lobby for a hypocritical quote (“I’m shocked to find gambling…”). And the Speaker de Jour (under fire) has to promise that the practice of “ghost voting” in this sense will not reoccur.

So the Speaker is embarrassed. The Minority Party uses the occasion to pretend the Majority does this as a matter of policy and routinely thwarts rules designed to protect the minority. The Majority Party resents this charge and fires back, and a rancorous period entails. All this is viewed as ‘petty partisan politics’ by the Press Corps, and as an opportunity to issue punishment to all.

Bill Cavala was Deputy Director of the Assembly Speaker’s Office of Member Services where he worked for over 30 years.

He attended undergraduate and graduate school in the 1960’s and received a doctorate in political science at UC Berkeley. He taught political science at UC Berkeley during the 1970's while he worked part-time for the State Assembly.

Cavala left teaching at UC Berkeley and went to work for Assembly Speaker Willie Brown in 1981 until his tenure as Speaker ended in 1995, and he has worked for his five successors as Speaker up to and including Speaker Fabian Nunez.

Mr. Cavala manages election campaigns for Democratic candidates.

Posted on June 10, 2008

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