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Peter Callaghan is a local columnist. He’s covered the statehouse and state politics since 1981. Before joining The News Tribune in 1985, the Stadium High grad worked for newspapers in Everett and Lewiston, Idaho, and for The Associated Press in Olympia and Seattle. Email Peter

Joe Turner has covered state government and transportation issues since 1990. Since the Bellarmine grad’s arrival in the newsroom in 1978, he’s covered police, suburban cities, Tacoma City Hall, Federal Way City Hall and the Pierce and King county governments. Email Joe

David Wickert covers Pierce County government. Before coming to The News Tribune in 1998, he covered local government for newspapers in Illinois, Virginia and Tennessee. Email David

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Let's talk politics.
Tuesday, October 7th, 2008
Posted by Joe Turner @ 11:08:14 am

Dave Ammons, spokesman for Secretary of State Sam Reed, says we have 3,515,393 registered voters now and that number is climbing as state and county election officials process registrations.

We would have had a lot more voters if they hadn't purged felony offenders and dead people from the rolls.

Brand-new voters have until Oct. 20 to register for the Nov. 4 general election, so our record is likely to get even higher.

You know what this means, dontcha? If we have a really big turnout, professional initiative promoter Tim Eyman will have to collect more signatures to validate his next ballot measure.

The number of signatures required for initiatives and refereda is based on how many people vote for governor in the general election every four years. Right now, it's 224,880 for initiatives and half that number for referenda. It's 8 percent and 4 percent of number of people who vote in governor's race.

Washington breaks voter registration record

OLYMPIA – Washington has just set a new record for voter registrations, topping the 3.5 million figure set in the hotly competitive 2004 election year.

[More:]

The latest number, reported by the Elections Division of the Secretary of State’s Office on Tuesday, is 3,515,393. The tally will grow each day as crews process registration applications that were submitted by the major deadline last Saturday. The old record was 3,514,078, and that number was later trimmed back significantly to remove duplicate registrations, felons and deceased voters. During the past three years, about 160,000 of these voters were removed from the rolls. Others were moved to inactive status because their ballots were returned to the counties as undeliverable or because the person didn’t vote in the past two federal elections. The registrations can be restored to active status.

“We couldn’t be happier that so many Washington citizens are stepping up to the privilege and responsibility of voting,” said Secretary of State Sam Reed. “Now we are hoping that voters will also participate in record-breaking numbers.”

Reed has not announced his prediction of turnout. The 2004 turnout was 82.23 percent, which was just below the 1960 turnout of 82.35 percent and the 1992 participation of 82.6. The state Elections Division is now surveying the 39 counties to solicit their predictions.

General Election ballots begin going in the mail late next week. Most voters now vote by mail _ 95 percent of the August primary ballots were cast by mail, with 37 of the 39 counties now voting entirely this way. Populous King County plans to switch next year, leaving Pierce County as the lone county with poll-site voting. Even in Pierce and King, most voters use mail-in ballots.

Over 280,000 new registrations have been added to the rolls in 2008, including a surge of more than 70,000 since mid-September. The surge is common once every four years as voters are drawn by presidential, gubernatorial and other statewide races and issues.

Last Saturday was the major registration deadline, the one allowing online and mail-in registrations and permitting voters to update their addresses or name-changes. County Auditors and the state Elections Division are still processing those applications, so the new record number of voters will continue to climb. Further, the state allows brand new Washington voters to go in-person to the county elections office as late as October 20 and still qualify for the General Election. The state has no estimate how many new voters will sign up this way.

“It’s safe to say that Washington state now has more registered voters than at any time in its history,” said state Elections Director Nick Handy. “We’ve had to bring in extra help to manage the flood of registrations and the counties are buried, too.”

Categories: Pierce County, Governor, Legislature, Congress, Voting, Campaign news, Transit, President, Initiatives and Referenda, Attorney General, Auditor, Treasurer, Schools Superintendent, Lands Commissioner, Secretary of State, Lt. Governor, Insurance Commissioner, State government, Supreme Court 3 comments

COMMENTS:

puyallup85 @ 13:06 - Tuesday, October 7th, 2008 Email
I know I've helped 6 friends register. I'm just hoping Acorn has learned their lesson and stays out of Washington politics. Regretfully, I'm sure they haven't. One thing I do know for sure, if Gregoire steals this election again, there will be rioting! Keep it CLEAN King County!
Daniel K @ 23:42 - Tuesday, October 7th, 2008
http://www.kirkdorffer.com/ontheroadto2008/
"We would have had a lot more voters if they hadn't purged felony offenders and dead people from the rolls."

Felony offenders and dead people can't possibly account for the 400,000 they purged.

We would have has a lot more voters if they also hadn't purged valid voters from the rolls.
evergreen_politician @ 23:17 - Wednesday, October 8th, 2008
You talk as though Tim Eyman owned the initiative process. Other citizens also promote initiatives, so your barely concealed glee about initiatives being harder to get on the ballot will affect them as well. If Mark Greene (Party of Commons) had qualified for election to Secretary of State through the Top 2 primary, he would have campaigned, among other things, on behalf of making it easier to get initiatives on the ballot, because the initiative process is pure democracy.

The Party of Commons, by the way, is now recommending a vote for Jason Osgood for Secretary of State. Reed's office is becoming arrogant and cocky, to the point that they will not even honor run-of-the-mill requests for common materials that ordinarily would be sent out to anybody that asks. Their big margin in "Top 2" makes them think that they cannot lose the General Election.

Not only that, but former Corporate Mainstream News Media journalists are flocking to Reed's office for sinecures (jobs). We won't say it's a quasi quid pro quo to ensure good press relations, but it seems strange that his office is becoming a haven for journalists.

If Osgood is elected, the Party of Commons asks that he makes it easier for political candidates, generally, with few economic resources, to be able to file for office by decreasing the signature criteria for the petition in lieu of the filing fee, especially since the filing fee is raised every time an office holder gets a pay raise. The filing fee and office holders' salary connection is more akin to plutocracy than democracy.

www.PartyofCommons.com

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