California Referendum Proponents Tentatively Win Court Case over Deadline for Submitting Petitions

On January 2, a California Superior Court Judge in Sacramento tentatively ruled that California election officials were wrong to reject referendum petitions submitted to Tulare and Mono Counties late last year. The California Constitution requires state referendum petitions to be submitted within 90 days after the bill was signed. It happened that the deadline for a recent statewide referendum petition was on a Sunday, November 10. Proponents tried to file their signatures on the afternoon of November 8 in one county, and on November 9 in another county, but county officials rejected them because they weren’t open for business. The Secretary of State also ruled that the petitions should be rejected.

The tentative ruling says that when petition deadlines fall on a weekend, the true deadline is the next business day. Thanks to AroundtheCapitol for this news.

The referendum proponents want to repeal a law passed by the California legislature on transgender public school students and their ability to use certain bathrooms. The lawsuit is Gleason v Bowen, 34-2013-80001714.


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