Friday, March 6, 2026

1.3 Million Californians Just Forced a Voter ID Fight — and Gavin Newsom Can’t Stop It This Time


Something remarkable happened in California this week, and it deserves more attention than it has gotten. A grassroots petition effort to require voter identification in the nation’s most populous state didn’t just limp past its legal threshold — it blew past it.

Reform California submitted more than 1.3 million signatures to county officials, nearly 50 percent above the 875,000 required to qualify the “California Voter ID Initiative” for the November 2026 ballot. In a state where Democrats hold a legislative supermajority and have spent years insulating their election policies from voter scrutiny, this is not a minor development.

The initiative, if passed by voters, would amend the California state constitution directly — bypassing the very legislative supermajority that has blocked every previous attempt at commonsense election reform. It would require voters to present identification when casting a ballot, compel election officials to verify the citizenship of registered voters, and mandate that the state maintain accurate, up-to-date voter rolls.

These are not radical demands. They are standard practices in dozens of countries around the world, including many that progressive activists routinely hold up as models of healthy democracy.

State Assembly Member Carl DeMaio, a Republican who chairs Reform California, has been emphatic that this is not a partisan crusade. His group says nearly half of the 1.35 million signatures came from Democrats and independents, representing all 58 of California’s counties.

“Polling overwhelmingly shows a supermajority consensus for voter I.D. requirements,” DeMaio said, citing internal data showing 71% of Californians favor the initiative. He framed the measure as “a common-sense and bipartisan way to restore the trust and confidence all voters should have in our election system.”

His logic is straightforward — and difficult to argue with seriously. “If you need an I.D. to board an airplane or buy a pack of cigarettes or buy a case of beer,” DeMaio said, “you should make it pretty easy to use an I.D. to vote in an election. This is not hard, it’s not rocket science, it’s quite simple.”

Critics who insist that requiring identification to vote is an act of suppression have never adequately explained why the same standard applied to alcohol purchases or airport security is considered reasonable everywhere except the ballot box.

Under current California law, voters are technically required to be U.S. citizens, but the state relies entirely on registrants to simply attest to that fact. There is no verification mechanism. The California Secretary of State’s own documentation confirms that the state does not generally require voters to show identification at the polls. In most cases, a person walks in, states their name, and votes. The only exception applies to first-time federal election voters who registered by mail or online and did not provide a California ID or Social Security number when doing so — and even then, acceptable forms of identification include a utility bill, a bank statement, or a paycheck. The standard is, to put it gently, not exacting.

This is the system Governor Gavin Newsom has not only defended but actively strengthened. In 2024, he signed legislation explicitly banning local jurisdictions from requiring identification to vote — a direct response to voters in Huntington Beach, California, who had approved a measure allowing city officials to require voter ID in municipal elections. The will of the local electorate was effectively nullified by the stroke of a pen. Newsom’s action made clear that he views voter ID not as a debatable policy question but as an existential threat to be stamped out wherever it appears.

His public statements bear that out. On his podcast earlier this year, Newsom invoked the legacy of Jim Crow when discussing the SAVE Act — federal legislation passed by the House of Representatives that would require proof of citizenship to register to vote. He suggested that requiring a birth certificate or passport to register could disproportionately burden Black Americans, arguing that “two-thirds of African Americans don’t have a passport.”

The implication was that asking for documentation of citizenship is a form of racial oppression. It is a charge that carries emotional weight, but it also papers over a practical reality: the initiative does not require a passport. It requires identification, and California issues identification cards to residents. The argument, examined closely, is more political than analytical.

The ACLU has piled on in predictable fashion. Julia Gomez, Senior Staff Attorney for the ACLU of Southern California, claimed the initiative “is about advancing Trump’s agenda to sow chaos in our elections.” Abdi Soltani, Executive Director of the ACLU of Northern California, called it an effort to “erect barriers that will keep eligible Californians from exercising their fundamental right to vote.”

These are serious allegations, but they rest on an unspoken premise — that eligible voters in California cannot or will not obtain identification. That premise treats millions of California citizens as incapable of navigating the same basic bureaucratic processes that apply to every other area of civic life.

It is worth pausing on the political geography of this moment. California has not elected a Republican to statewide office since 2006. Its state legislature has been controlled by Democrats for decades. Its major cities are run almost exclusively by Democratic mayors and councils. And yet, more than 1.3 million Californians — from all 58 counties, from both parties, from every walk of life — voluntarily signed a petition to require identification at the polls. That is not the profile of a fringe movement. That is a population sending a signal that the political class has missed, or chosen to ignore.

The argument that voter ID laws suppress minority participation has been repeated so often that many have stopped interrogating it. But the evidence is more complicated. DeMaio noted in his press release that “other states that have implemented Voter ID programs have seen an increase in participation in their elections — including an increase in minority voting.” This claim is contested in academic literature, but the flat assertion that ID requirements equal suppression is not the settled consensus its proponents imply. Georgia, which tightened its election laws in 2021 amid enormous controversy, saw record turnout in the 2022 midterms. Reality has a way of complicating the narrative.

What the opposition really fears, though likely won’t say plainly, may have less to do with identification itself than with what verification would reveal. California’s voter rolls have been the subject of documented concerns for years. Multiple counties have had more registered voters than voting-age citizens according to Census data. The state’s motor voter law automatically registers people to vote when they obtain or renew a driver’s license, a policy that has produced well-documented errors and, critics argue, creates conditions ripe for inaccurate rolls. Requiring citizenship verification and maintaining accurate rolls — two of the initiative’s three main pillars — would force a reckoning with those problems.

It is also worth noting what this initiative does not do. It does not require a specific form of ID. It does not charge a fee. It does not impose a literacy test or a poll tax. It does not restrict early voting or mail ballots. It asks, at its core, that the person casting a ballot be who they say they are and that they be a citizen of the country whose elections they are participating in. Every other democratic nation on Earth has concluded that this is a reasonable ask. The United States is an outlier in not having a national ID requirement for voting, and California is an outlier even within that context.

The next step in the process is county-level verification of the submitted signatures, followed by reporting to the California Secretary of State’s office. If the signatures hold — and organizers submitted 425,000 more than required, leaving a substantial cushion — the measure will appear before California voters in November 2026. At that point, it will face the full weight of the state Democratic Party apparatus, public employee unions, and an array of well-funded progressive organizations. The opposition will be formidable, and the campaign will be expensive.

But the terrain is more favorable than it may appear. The polling is striking. A 71% approval figure, if even roughly accurate, means a substantial portion of California Democrats support the idea. The bipartisan signature count reinforces that. And at a time when public trust in elections remains deeply fractured — on both sides of the political divide — a straightforward measure promising greater accountability may find a broader coalition than its opponents expect or acknowledge.

Newsom, for his part, will be watching closely. His national ambitions are well known, and his positioning on voter ID has placed him firmly in the camp of those who treat the issue as a racial and moral emergency. A decisive voter approval of the California Voter ID Initiative in his own state would be a direct repudiation of that posture, delivered by the very electorate he has spent years claiming to represent. That is the collision coming in November — not just a policy dispute, but a direct referendum on whether California’s ruling class has been listening to the people it governs.

Whether the initiative ultimately reaches the ballot and passes will depend on the signature verification process, the legal challenges that will almost certainly follow, and the willingness of ordinary Californians to hold their ground against an institutional opposition that will call them every name in the book. What cannot be undone is the fact that 1.3 million of them showed up and signed their names. That happened. And it matters.

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