Investigation finds Latino ballots in WA more likely to be rejected

Latino signatures are more likely to be questioned and less likely to be fixed during Washington state elections.

Employees check ballots at King County Elections office in Renton on July 31, 2017. (Matt M. McKnight/Crosscut)

Marissa Reyes still doesn’t understand why her signature would cause her August 2020 Benton County primary election ballot to be tossed out. 

A letter from the county elections office challenging her signature came to her home in Prosser. But Reyes had left for New York, where she had just finished college. Confused, neither Reyes nor her parents had the time to figure it all out before her ballot was rejected.

“I definitely felt annoyed and a little apathetic, but definitely not surprised,” Reyes recalled.

Fast-forward to November 2020, when the ballots of nearly 24,000 registered Washington voters were not counted because officials judged their ballot signatures to not match their signatures on file, which is often their driver’s license signature.

And in the eight Washington counties with the largest share of potential Latino voters, people with Spanish-sounding names, like Reyes, are nearly four times more likely than others to have their ballot rejected for a signature mismatch, according to an InvestigateWest analysis of four recent elections.

The curiously high rate of disenfranchisement among Latino voters could have altered election outcomes.

Experts and voters themselves have suggested a variety of explanations for signature rejections among Latino voters, including language barriers, education levels and implicit bias. This issue is amplified by Latino voters seeming to be less successful than other voters at “curing,” or fixing, their signature rejections, the InvestigateWest analysis found

“I’m not surprised that Latin American sounding names are thrown by the wayside,” Reyes said of InvestigateWest’s analysis. She doesn’t believe her signature should be suspect. Like other kids in her Benton County school, she learned cursive long ago, and her parents even helped her practice at home.


InvestigateWest is a Seattle-based nonprofit newsroom producing journalism for the common good. Learn more and sign up to receive alerts about future stories at bit.ly/invw-newsletter


Reyes was born and raised in Prosser. She called the culture there racist and xenophobic. On Cinco de Mayo, a celebrated day of Mexican American culture, she remembers people driving around town in trucks with Confederate flags. Some of the kids who grew up there went on to work in local schools and government, she said.

“There needs to be more accountability so that these biases don’t permeate our building blocks of democracy,” Reyes said. 

Multiple Washington county elections staff members said the signatures that go through several reviews and remain challenged are obviously mismatched. Still, county canvassing boards and elections officials sometimes decide to accept a few of those ballots from the challenged signature pile, they told InvestigateWest.

Rejected ballots can change results

These findings are based on InvestigateWest’s analysis of state and federal data, in addition to responses to more than 40 public records requests to two state agencies and eight counties, covering 11 million votes cast over four high-turnout elections in 2019 and 2020. InvestigateWest also conducted more than 50 interviews with voters, auditors, lawyers, community leaders, elections researchers and other experts, in addition to in-person observation of county elections officials reviewing voter signatures.

The analysis covers the eight counties in Central and Eastern Washington with the highest share of Hispanic or Latino voters, according to the U.S. Census Bureau — Adams, Benton, Chelan, Douglas, Franklin, Grant, Walla Walla and Yakima counties.

According to a consent decree in a lawsuit brought in Yakima County under the federal Voting Rights Act, the Washington secretary of state matches Yakima voter last names to a “Spanish surname” list provided in 2004 by the U.S. Department of Justice. InvestigateWest also used this list to analyze signature rejections.

Latinos make up 37% of the total population in these eight counties, and 21% of the voting population. White, non-Hispanic voters make up most of the remaining voting population in these counties. While the eight counties account for 10% of the statewide voting population, they account for 29% of the Latino voting population in Washington.

Latino voters had a 1% signature rejection rate in the November 2020 election, four times the rate of other voters. Another way to look at it: In these eight counties, Latino voters contributed 17% of accepted ballots in November 2020, but 46% of ballot rejections. Statewide, Latino voters made up more than 5% of accepted ballots.

The rate at which Latino voters’ ballots are challenged is also higher than others. They fix, or “cure,” their signatures at lower rates than other voters, as well, InvestigateWest’s data analysis revealed. 

Workers at county elections offices do much of the work in signature verification and outreach to voters with challenged ballots. The final stop is the county canvassing board, where officials reject —  or occasionally accept ­— a ballot. (See accompanying story explaining the process in more detail.)  

As with other research on ballot rejections, these numbers cannot directly measure if or how bias plays a role in signature mismatches or the process to cure it.  But research on handwriting comparison suggests room for human error.

“We’ve seen evidence throughout the country that people of color and young voters have their ballots disproportionately rejected. And that’s a huge issue because it’s your voice and you have the right to vote and have that vote counted,” said Breanne Schuster, attorney with ACLU of Washington.

These signature mismatches may decide elections. In 2004, Washington experienced the closest and most bitterly contested statewide election in its history. Democrat Christine Gregoire won the gubernatorial race by fewer than 200 votes out of 2.8 million cast.

And in at least three recent examples InvestigateWest examined, signature rejections added up to more than the margin between two candidates:

  • The Wapato mayoral election of 2017 brought community members and lawyers to the public meetings where Yakima County Canvassing Board members scrutinized signatures. In the end, the board rejected 21 signatures from Wapato, and Juan Orozco won by four votes.
  • In another Yakima County race, in November 2019, Mike Farmer won Sunnyside City Council Position 5 by just one vote. The Yakima board rejected four signatures.
  • And in November 2020, state Sen. Mark Mullet, an Issaquah Democrat who represents the 5th Legislative District in King County, kept his seat by a margin of 58 votes. The nearly 400 signature rejections in the district far exceeded that margin.

“In states that use signature matches, there are going to be some serious questions about reliability and its disproportionate effects on minority communities,” said David Morales, former vice chairman of the Washington Commission on Hispanic Affairs, who observed the 2017 Wapato election signature-scrutinizing proceedings. “It’s worth asking the question of how scientifically valid are the systems we use? If someone challenged this as a valid methodology, I wonder if it would be struck down by the court.”

 

 

 

 

What’s in a name?

Most ballot rejections in Washington fall into three groups: late ballots, missing signatures and mismatched signatures. Only a signature mismatch is based on judgment. Some other states use machines in the signature matching process. 

Elections staff identify a signature for a possible mismatch when at least half of the voter’s name and writing do not match a signature on file. A “signature challenge” indicates a serious discrepancy in either both parts of the name or the actual handwriting.

The reason voters’ legitimate signatures lead to a challenge — and, in about half the cases, a rejection — is complicated. Sometimes they sign sloppily on their car’s dashboard or their knee, before putting the ballot in a drop box. Sometimes they ask a household member to sign it for them, not realizing that the match is important, said Chelan County Auditor Skip Moore.

Franklin County Elections challenged Daniella Esparza’s signature for the first time in November, after about eight years of voting with her married name. Feeling that this was a “life-changing” election, she emailed the elections office to get the signature update form and fixed it.

Like Reyes, she wasn’t surprised to learn there is a higher rate of signature rejections for Latino surnames. Esparza guessed that in Franklin County, people might assume a Latino name may have Democrat voting preferences.

She acknowledged that her signature did evolve right after she got married in 2012, so she wondered why it was contested in this particular election, in 2020. “I’ve voted plenty of times since it changed, and it was never mismatched before. That’s what makes me feel it was my party, the importance of this election,” Esparza said.

The eight counties InvestigateWest examined  are dominated by Republican and white voters. For example, in the recent November 2020 general election, on average, 57% of voters supported President Trump, and 61% supported Republican gubernatorial challenger Loren Culp. The counties range from a high of 71% for Culp in Adams, to a low of 57% in Yakima.

In these counties, Republicans also fill all or the majority of the three elected official slots on the county canvassing boards. But because these officials can designate someone else for each election, the public doesn’t always have ready access to the list of actual board members or their political party affiliation for each election.

Some of these counties and major cities within them have been under pressure to expand city council and county commission representation for Latino residents by actual and threatened lawsuits under the federal Voting Rights Act and the newly enacted Washington version of that law.

The Yakima City Council was required to move from at-large to district elections after a 2014 court ruling. Pasco did this because of a lawsuit in 2016. Wenatchee acted preemptively, adopting city council district elections in 2018.

Yakima County is being sued under state law over the county commissioner electoral system. It is under threat of a similar lawsuit under federal law. Similar to Yakima, Franklin County has been sent a notice letter challenging its county commission electoral system under the Washington state Voting Rights Act and the state constitution.

Officials from Franklin County did not respond to requests for comment on the mismatch disparities. Following the advice of their prosecuting attorney, Yakima County officials declined to comment on the disparities.

This disparity for Latino voters is not limited to Central and Eastern Washington. InvestigateWest contacted nine county auditor offices that administer elections. Only King County responded that it had done some preliminary internal data analysis of something similar in past elections.

King County offers ballots in Chinese, English, Korean, Spanish and Vietnamese. For ballots that were rejected for all reasons except being too late, Spanish ballots had the highest rejection rate among the five languages.

 

 

 

 

Immigrants could also face language and cultural barriers in the voting and curing processes. Only in Adams, Franklin and Yakima counties are voting materials required to be in Spanish. These counties are covered under Section 203 of the federal Voting Rights Act, which, among other things, requires voting materials to be provided in different languages if 5% of voters or more than 10,000 voting-age native speakers use that language.

Experts, elections officials, and voters provided a range of possible explanations for the higher Latino rejection rates across age groups, including lower education and literacy levels.

Latinos in the eight counties have substantially lower education levels than whites, according to U.S. census data. The largest gap is in Grant County: 92% of white adults have completed at least high school compared with just under half of Latino adults. Six of the counties rank among the seven lowest statewide in literacy measurements for the overall adult population. 

Morales and others working in community services think that lower education and literacy levels among the region’s Latino community pose challenges to voting successfully.

 “The usage of signatures as an identifying marker is somewhat questionable as a policy choice, given the education levels of the local Latino population,” Morales said.

Young voters face high mismatch rejection

Voters age 18 to 24 represented fewer than 10% of all accepted ballots in the eight counties, but 40% of mismatch rejections. For all counties combined, as age increases, mismatch rejection rates decrease.

And Latino voters make up nearly 40% of young voters in these counties. In contrast, non-Latino voters in these counties dominate the oldest and largest group: they are 94% of voters age 65 or older.

The youngest Latino voters’ mismatch rate is nearly twice that of their non-Latino peers. 

Jesenia Hernandez experienced just that problem in August 2020 when she was 24. Because of a medical procedure, Hernandez didn’t have the time or energy to fix her signature challenge in that election. She had registered to vote nearly seven years earlier and knew that her signature had likely changed.

For the November election, Hernandez studied her driver’s license and tried to repeat that signature on her Franklin County ballot. That careful copying of her own signature worked, and her vote counted.

 

 

 

 

Still, signature challenges come as a surprise to many voters, including Lisandra Valencia, 39. She received her first signature mismatch notice in November. She is not sure why, although she admits it is possible her signature has evolved over the past 20 years. Experts say this is common.

“Signature instability” refers to the propensity for signatures to change over time and across contexts.

Signatures might change rapidly among the youngest voters, and more gradually among older voters, according to the Washington State Patrol, which provides the required forensic training on signature matching for elections staff. Signature instability also affects voters with disabilities.

Here is how the Washington State Patrol describes signature instability: “There will always be variations in signatures since they are the product of a person and not the output of a machine.” These natural variations may be “subtle” or “drastic,” depending on the context of the signature — a state Department of Licensing electronic pad versus a ballot, for example.

The state patrol training continues: “Signatures will also change and mature as the writer ages. Signatures typically continue to mature through the writer's 20s.”

“It puts in me a sense of making sure that my vote does count, that it’s in on time. I’m glad I sent it earlier. But I wish I got something back to know that it was counted,” Valencia said of the experience. Because COVID-19 affected her family, she did not have time to proactively check her ballot’s final status, she said. Washington secretary of state records show that Franklin County accepted it.

The lost art of cursive

Some voters, particularly young ones, do not even have a cursive signature when they sign for their driver’s license or identification card.

A number of young voters told InvestigateWest that they had printed their signature when getting their driver’s license. Later they developed a cursive signature, which they used on their ballot, immediately triggering a mismatch. Adams County Auditor Heidi Hunt confirmed this is a problem.

Kenisha Martinez unwittingly made this mistake. She recently registered to vote, and the Grant County auditor used her signature from her driver’s license. That signature was her printed name from 2018. When she voted in November, she signed her ballot in cursive. Her ballot was ultimately thrown out.

“It made me feel frustrated because it was my first time voting, so I was eager to finally be able to vote and make my opinion count,” Martinez said.

Many young voters did not learn cursive in school, and many future voters aren’t learning it either. That’s just one reason that King County Elections predicts that the handwritten signature will become “obsolete.”

Benton County Auditor Brenda Chilton perceived that the prevalence of print signatures is higher among Latino voters. And print is just more difficult to compare with cursive.

Even comparing cursive signatures is an “art,” according to Moore, the Chelan County auditor.

Handwriting comparison is not a science, let alone an exact science, said Itiel Dror, senior cognitive neuroscience researcher at the University College London and a recognized expert in this area.  Even two handwriting experts could review the same pair of signatures and arrive at different conclusions. This leads to legitimate signatures being rejected, and potentially fraudulent ones being accepted, Dror said. 

Human judgment means bias

When trained staffers at county elections departments first review the ballot signatures, they can see the voter’s printed name, age and voter ID. According to Dror, that is enough information to trigger biases based on ethnicity, religion and more.

“I believe that there is some internal cultural process in the administration of these elections, with the rejected ballot process that is bouncing out these folks. I don’t know what it is,” said Zack Hudgins, a former Washington state representative and leader on voting rights.

But like others, he guesses that bias is only one part of the problem. He continued, “We’ve seen that in these counties, and that’s why we had to pass the Voting Rights Act.”

Studies nationally document racial bias generally in government offices, and specifically in election administration. In one of these studies, elections officials across 48 states were less likely to respond to emails sent from Latino-sounding email addresses relative to non-Latino-sounding addresses. When they did respond, it was with lower quality information about voting requirements, the study showed. Importantly, the researchers found no bias in counties and municipalities where mechanisms established under the Voting Rights Act are in place to prevent racial discrimination.

“Every voter should have an equal right to their mail ballot being counted; however, we know well that Latinos are more likely to have their ballots rejected for signature issues,” said Matt A. Barreto, faculty director of the UCLA Voting Rights Project.  

InvestigateWest’s findings are largely in line with other studies of vote-by-mail in other states that report race or ethnicity in the voter data. Research on Los Angeles County absentee ballots found that non-English ballots had a higher likelihood of rejection.

In other studies, minority, young and more recently registered voters are generally more likely to have ballots rejected. In Georgia, Hispanic voters were more likely than white voters to have a mistake, such as a signature, on the return envelope. In Florida, minority, young and first-time voters had disproportionately high rates of mail ballot rejections, although Florida does not report the reasons that votes are rejected.

Barreto, who has been an expert witness in more than two dozen Washington state and federal voting rights lawsuits, said state and federal government should provide increased funding, training and guidance to ensure all ballots have an equal chance.

The signature mismatch rates caught Molly Matter’s attention during the Wapato 2017 mayoral race. An attorney in private practice, she specializes in federal and state voting rights law.

She said a practice like signature verification can be “racially neutral” on its face. But, Matter added, “it is clear that the impact of how they go about the signature verification process places an undue burden on minority voters. Losing the right to vote by a government technicality is no worse than denying these citizens a ballot in the first place.”

Regardless of the underlying reasons for the mismatches, signature verification is a policy choice over what constitutes voter identification. Voters used to sign their name on a log at a physical polling place, and could try to fix any problems in-person.

And yet no evidence exists of widespread voter fraud in Washington or other vote-by-mail states, a finding confirmed by county auditors.

“I do know that voter fraud is so rare, and certainly disproportionate to the number of signatures being rejected. So maybe there are opportunities for different verification methods,” said the ACLU’s Schuster.

Please support independent local news for all.

We rely on donations from readers like you to sustain Crosscut's in-depth reporting on issues critical to the PNW.

Donate

About the Authors & Contributors