That’s the talk, as hundreds of thousands of ballots in Fresno
County contained illegal, politically-charged language describing
the global warming act-postponing measure. The Sacramento
Bee
reports:
Ballots printed for the county’s roughly 380,000 registered
voters say Proposition 23 would suspend laws requiring “major
polluters” to report and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. That
language was thrown out by a Sacramento superior court judge, who
ordered several edits to the original language drafted by the
attorney general’s office, including changing “major polluters” to
“major sources of emissions.”
The Proposition 23 campaign has demanded that the county “take
immediate steps to reprint the ballots remaining to be sent to vote
by mail voters as well as ballots to be distributed on election
day.”
“Fresno County is a county of significant size in California and
in a close election, its vote, now tainted by this serious error,
could call into question the state results and possibly give rise
to an election contest and require a new statewide election on
Proposition 23,” attorney Colleen C. McAndrews wrote in a letter to
the Fresno elections officials.
Officials say it’s too late to do anything about the 140,000
mail-in ballots that have already been distributed, and that they
will post signs with the correct language at polling places.
This is not insignificant; environmental extremists have been
trying to label carbon dioxide emitters (that would be me and you
also, readers) as “polluters” to push their fraudulent global
warming scenario since they took up the cause. If you were just
faintly familiar with the issue, would you be more likely to vote
against the measure if businesses were identified as “polluters”
rather than “sources of emissions?”
A major screw-up that could require a new election. Not
surprisingly, the opponents of Prop. 23 are pooh-poohing the
significance of the error.