Written by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM
The North Carolina State Board of Elections denied Thursday 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 filing 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 in an interview. “(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.
Absentee ballot request forms must also include a date of birth and the last four digits of the voter’s Social Security Number or driver’s license number.
While 27 states conduct signature verification for absentee voting documents, none of those states require the signature of a witness or notary, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Photo via AP Photo/Nati Harnik.
Related Stories
‹

North Carolina Absentee Ballots Are Being Distributed Following 2-Week DelayWritten by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS North Carolina counties started distributing absentee ballots Tuesday for the November general election to those who requested them, roughly two weeks later than anticipated as a legal challenge forced delays. Election officials in all 100 counties planned to mail out the first ballots to regular state residents starting Tuesday. Ballots to […]

North Carolina’s Absentee Ballot Release Was Delayed by RFK Jr. Ruling, but Will Begin This WeekNorth Carolina's first absentee ballots for the November election will be distributed starting this week, the State Board of Elections said.

Judge Denies GOP Appeal for Signature Checks on Mail BallotsWritten by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM North Carolina’s State Board of Elections directed county election officials on Monday not to engage in signature matching when reviewing absentee ballot envelopes this fall after a judge rejected the GOP appeal of a state board ruling prohibiting the practice. According to a directive sent to county election directors from the […]

GOP Pursues Court Order Over Rejected Signature Check MotionWritten by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM One week before North Carolina election officials begin processing by-mail ballots in the closely watched Southern swing state, the GOP is pursuing its latest legal challenge to the electoral procedures established by the Democrat-led State Board of Elections. The North Carolina Republican Party filed two motions in Wake County Superior Court […]

GOP Sues Over NC Board's Absentee Ballot Date, Observer RuleWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON North Carolina and national Republicans sued Friday seeking to block the State Board of Elections from extending the fall absentee-ballot receipt deadline because of a holiday and from enforcing a rule that could disrupt the movement of some polling site observers. The Republican National Committee, state Republican Party and the […]

North Carolina Governor Vetoes Election Bill, Sparking Override Showdown With GOP SupermajorityWritten by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed a sweeping Republican elections bill Thursday that would end a grace period for voting by mail and make new allowances for partisan poll observers. In a video message, the Democratic governor accused legislative Republicans of using their slim veto-proof majorities to execute “an all-out assault on the right […]

Elections Board, Absentee, Early Vote Changes Heard by North Carolina Senate PanelWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON North Carolina Republican senators began on Wednesday to attempt to advance wide-ranging voting measures addressing early and absentee balloting and transferring control over the state election board from Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper to legislative leaders. The sponsors of the two measures pitched to a Senate committee said they’re designed to […]

N. Carolina Rights Groups Say GOP Bills Impede Voting AccessWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON Civil and voting rights groups Monday blasted election bills written by North Carolina Republicans and expected on the Senate floor this week, calling them another GOP attempt at voter suppression, especially of minority groups. Senate GOP leaders are advancing three measures, one of which would require mail-in absentee ballots be received by […]

Bill Moving up Absentee Deadline in NC Clears Senate PanelWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON Mail-in absentee ballots in North Carolina would have to be received by the day of the election, under a Republican-backed bill that cleared a divided Senate committee on Wednesday. Current law says ballot envelopes must be postmarked by the election date and received within three days to be counted. That window […]

North Carolina Republicans Seek Data to Resolve Top RacesNorth Carolina Republicans pressed state election officials on Friday to make public more information about the number of outstanding ballots from this week’s election that could be counted. Nearly a dozen Election Day races in North Carolina, including those for president and U.S. Senate, remain too early to call because as many as 172,000 ballots […]
›