Bonta and Weber Urge Californians to Vote Early Ahead of November 4 Special Election
Press release from the Office of Attorney General Rob Bonta:
In advance of the Tuesday, November 4, 2025 Special Election, California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Secretary of State Shirley N. Weber, Ph.D. held a press conference today to remind Californians about their voting rights, encourage Californians to vote early, and advise law enforcement agencies about laws protecting the integrity of the electoral process. The Secretary of State is California’s top election official, and the Attorney General enforces California’s election laws to ensure free and fair elections.“This year, it is critical that Californians vote as early as possible. In many parts of California, recent changes in the U.S. Postal mail service mean that your ballot may not be counted if you drop it off at a post office on Election Day. If you choose to drop off your ballot at a post office on Election Day, ask at the counter for a postmark to ensure you get credit for mailing your ballot on time. And remember: You have other options, like dropping your ballot off at a vote center or in a secure drop box,” said Attorney General Rob Bonta. “Our election laws provide the backbone for a free and fair election, and as California’s top law enforcement officer, I will do everything in my power to protect your right to vote.”
“Your vote is your voice, and California protects its citizens’ rights to use their voice through their vote. Vote-by-mail ballots will be mailed to all active registered voters no later than October 6, 2025, and voters have several options for returning their completed ballot early,” said Secretary of State Weber. “Voters can contact their county elections office at sos.ca.gov/elections/voting-
resources/county-elections- offices for information about vote centers, drop boxes, and their voting options. Voters can also sign up to track their ballot at WheresMyBallot.sos.ca.gov. Every Californian has the right to cast a ballot free from intimidation, harassment, or coercion. And anyone who is subject to, or witnesses any type of, voter interference should report it to my office, their county elections office, or to elections workers on site.” In addition, Attorney General Bonta and Secretary of State Weber, recognizing that many Californians turn to social media and other internet sources for news and information about elections, warned voters about the spread of misinformation online.
For up-to-date information on how to vote, check official websites, including sos.ca.gov/elections. Eligible Californians have until Monday, October 20, 2025 to register to vote at registertovote.ca.gov, or if after the deadline, register in-person through Same Day Voter Registration (Conditional Voter Registration).
Voting Early or On Time
Due to changes in the U.S. Postal mail service, in some rural areas — or areas away from key mail processing sites — a ballot dropped in the U.S. mail on Election Day might be collected too late to be counted. Under the U.S. Postal Service’s new process, mail dropped off at post offices and mail collection boxes more than 50 miles from a U.S. Postal Service regional hub is collected the next day, instead of the same day (see map below). This means that, in some areas, ballots dropped off at a post office or mail collection box on Election Day won’t be postmarked until the day after, making them late. Late ballots are not counted. Californians are encouraged to drop off their ballots a day, or a few days, before Election Day.
See below for some alternative ways to ensure your vote is counted:
- Drop off your ballot at a ballot drop-off box or voter center. Ballot drop-off boxes open on October 7, 2025 and remain available until Election Day.
- If you’re cutting it close, drop off your completed mail ballot at a vote center on Election Day.
- If you can’t make it to a vote center, you can go to any post office and ask at the counter for a postmark on your ballot to ensure you get credit for mailing your ballot on time.
- Get your ballot in the mail at least a few days before Election Day.
Voting Rights
It is important for Californians to know their voting rights. Below is information on the California Voter Bill of Rights, additional information on state and federal protections for Californians with disabilities as they access their right to vote, and a consumer alert about the spread of misinformation online.
California Voter Bill of Rights
The rights available to the public when voting can be found in the California Voter Bill of Rights. Those rights are the following:
- The right to vote if you are a registered voter.
- The right to vote if you are a registered voter, even if your name is not on the list of registered voters, by casting a provisional ballot.
- The right to vote if you are still in line when the polls close.
- The right to cast a secret ballot without anyone bothering you or telling you how to vote.
- The right to get a new ballot if you have made a mistake, if you have not already cast your ballot.
- The right to get help casting your ballot from anyone you choose, except from your employer or union representative.
- The right to drop off your completed vote-by-mail ballot at any polling place in California.
- The right to get election materials in a language other than English if enough people in your voting precinct speak that language.
- The right to ask questions to elections officials about election procedures and watch the election process.
- The right to report any illegal or fraudulent election activity to an elections official or the Secretary of State’s Office.
Denial of any of these rights can be reported through the Secretary of State’s confidential toll-free Voter Hotline at (800) 345-VOTE (8683); on the web at www.sos.ca.gov; or via email at [email protected]. The California Voter Bill of Rights is available in English, Spanish, Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, Khmer, Korean, Tagalog, Thai, Vietnamese, Arabic, Armenian, Bengali, Burmese, Gujarati, Hmong, Ilocano, Indonesian, Laotian, Mien, Mongolian, Nepali, Persian, Punjabi, Syriac, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu.
In the lead up to the election and on Election Day, the California Department of Justice will be on call to provide additional assistance to the Secretary of State’s Office in enforcing California’s election laws, as needed, through a team of attorneys and administrative staff located across the state.
Consumer Alert on Misinformation’s Impact on Voting Rights
With millions of Californians turning to social media, artificial intelligence, and other internet sources for news and information about elections, the California Department of Justice published an updated consumer alert to warn about how election misinformation can potentially interfere with voting rights. California law makes it a crime to intentionally mislead voters about their eligibility to vote, or about where and when to vote.
Rights of Voters with Disabilities
The California Department of Justice has previously released a publication entitled “Access to Voting for People with Disabilities,” which includes information about the federal and state laws that protect voters with disabilities. For example:
- The federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 requires that election officials allow voters to receive assistance from a person of the voter’s choice if the voter is blind or has another disability that requires assistance.
- The federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires voting facilities to have accessible voting systems, parking, and routes to the entrance.
- California’s Voter’s Choice Act requires that vote centers comply with federal accessibility requirements and be equipped with voting units or systems that are accessible to voters with disabilities.
- California Government Code section 11135 prohibits disability-based discrimination in programs and activities that are conducted, operated, or administered by the state or by any state agency, are funded directly by the state, or receive any financial assistance from the state. A violation of the ADA is also a violation of section 11135.
If a person believes that they or someone else was discriminated against based on a disability while registering to vote or voting, they may file a complaint with the California Civil Rights Department.
Role of Law Enforcement
The California Department of Justice has also published a law enforcement bulletin entitled “Protecting California Voters and Election Workers on Election Day and Early Voting,” which discusses California laws that prohibit engaging in election interference, voter intimidation, and voter deception. Law enforcement officers should be aware of these statutes as they relate to the protection of voters in California. For example:
- It is a felony to use tactics of coercion or intimidation to induce or compel a person to vote or refrain from voting, or to vote or refrain from voting for any particular person or measure, at any election.
- It is a felony to agree to vote in a certain way or induce others to vote in a certain way in exchange for money or something of value.
In addition, the Secretary of State’s Office issued an updated memorandum concerning voter intimidation explaining, in part, that:
- It is a felony for any person to possess a firearm at a voting location or in the immediate vicinity of a voting location.
- It is illegal for any uniformed peace officer, private guard, or security personnel or any person who is wearing a uniform of a peace officer, guard, or security personnel to be stationed at or in the immediate vicinity of a voting location.
- Shirts, hats, or other displays that indicate a person is with “Election Security” or “Ballot Security” or apparel or accessories with any semblance of a logo or display that might be confused with any private guard or security company or government agency are prohibited. This includes observers and anyone who is not there to vote.
Elections officials are encouraged to contact their local law enforcement regarding potential violations of law. As it does every election, the Secretary of State’s Office will be deploying poll observers across the state to monitor voting and ensure that Californians can exercise their right to vote free from intimidation and harassment.
For a graphic of key election dates, and options for turning in your ballot on election day, please see here.
For a map highlighting the U.S. Postal Service regional hubs, please see here.

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“Vote early and vote often.”
“Vote early” — you added “often”
Humor, mel, humor.
Funny but true.
No on 50! Two wrongs don’t make a right. What a waste of tax money for hypocritical posturing. The bipartisan commission was created to prevent this exact behavior. Don’t let Sacramento steal the voice of the tax payer approved commission for the next 4 years or until 2031.
I vote for not spending more on this stupid idea…
Your Government is ineffectual, impotent, and corrupt…
They do waste money well…
Who gives an actual fuck, or thinks it will make government any more or less fair, anyway?
It’s a contest of who’s got the most money, and then who looks the best in a suit…
A Confederacy of Dunces, by any measure, and we are the sheep…
I always fill out my ballot the same day it arrives and mail it the following day.
YES ON 50 😁⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I’ve never really understood that.
You can’t change your vote if there are late breaking developments.
I usually fill mine out and mail it in the day before election day.
Also, YES ON 50
(and shame on Texas)
That is a point. It’s also a point that there might arise things that make a person either forget or miss the deadline for reasons beyond their control.
No on 50 (and shame on Newsom et al. that they think political expediency is worth a special election to do something they call shame on Texas for doing and worse might be useless anyway)
It’s self-defense. Perhaps that’s “expediency.
Texas redistricting mid-census to try to disenfranchise Democrats is so blatant.
I do find it funny when Democrats do fight back against such blatant actions then it’s the Democrats who are the bad guys. The GOP can do whatever and not really a peep, but when Democrats respond with gloves off, then it’s “Oh No!!! I’ve got the vapors!”
Yep.
You are not responsible for Texas. You are responsible for California.
“The trend began in Texas, where the Republican-led Legislature passed a plan backed by Trump. California Democrats responded with their own map to help their party, though it still requires voter approval. On Sunday, Republican Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe signed a revised congressional map into law.” Then maybe Kansas, Indiana, New York, Maryland, Utah, etc. In the end,you may have just sold out your integrity for no gain at all. Or worse even, confirm that party controlled gerrymandering works and therefore enshrine it in the California Constitution. It obviously wouldn’t take much.
No matter how wrong the obsessing over Trump leads to, people don’t seem to be able to quit.
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/the-fight-to-redraw-u-s-house-maps-is-spreading-heres-where-things-stand-in-missouri-and-other-states
So, sit back and quietly accede to the Republican attempt at continued federal control is your response? I wonder what the next step would be to retain power? A third term?
Let’s be clear, Trump called Texas and requested the redistricting because the writing is on the wall for the mid-term elections. Complaining that Democrats are responding to that attempt without calling out the Republicans seems disingenuous at best.
That you even put it in those terms shows how bankrupt the idea is. I don’t have to call out Texas. You doing it at decibels that rupture ear drums.
For people who were so smug about Hillary Clinton winning, they let Trump get by them then frantically pushed Biden because they fear Trump winning, then, when that seemed shaky, led to switching last minute to Harris and let Trump win again, you’d think you would at least start questioning your Party’s strategies. Trump owns you because you can not think of anything else. All the Democrats have to do is wave Trump at you and you’d charge over a cliff. Get a grip!
This is not a do nothing or blow up the building choice. It comes down to this it is because liberals have failed to appeal to the majority of voters.
*Democrats have failed to appeal to the majority of voters.
That’s why so many liberals sat out the last election.
Nice rationalization — lets you avoid any responsibility for not calling out the Republicans doing heinous shit by shifting the blame onto Democrats for not being cool enough. The DNC sucks, no doubt. But their fecklessness in running a national campaign does not excuse the lack of a backbone by Republicans in reining in a corrupt autocrat.
No one shifted blame, the blame is on democrats because they failed to include “we the people” in their campaign. “Let’s hate Trump and say terrible things about it” is not a winning strategy.
Those thinking you aren’t “cool enough” are in your own party. Now we have democrat males attempting to adopt a “cool” posture. Schumer is even using the “F” word in a video to rationalize his shutting down the government.
I have always crossed party lines even though I am a registered Republican. My belief is: it shouldn’t be about entrenching oneself in ideology. Nixon was a shock to me, but I saw him for what he was. I just don’t understand democrats who keep voting in a solid block even when their party has failed them in so many ways.
Voting yes on 50 is actually going against a constitutional amendment legislated in California a few years ago. It will give democrats the upper hand, but it changes nothing except the percentage of Republican districts. If it wins, I guess we will see what results it will have in 2026.
Do you really think that Abbott is so timid it took Trump to get him into action?
Trump really has you in a lather, but Abbott and his team including Cruz had what they wanted to do all figured out last year.
So, no, you did not “clear” up what we must be “clear about”. I doubt any writing is on the wall re: 2026. The only thing I know is if democrats keep fighting against all the things voters voted for in the last election, it might not be the result democrats are looking for.
I think if I were a democrat I would be looking for something other than Marxism/communism as the antidote to the loss suffered in 2024
Says every war lord creating chaos throughout history.
Expediency is doing whatever it takes to win. Not sure that’s what a democratic Republic is all about. Democracy means the majority wins and the minority loses, but neither side should use “expediency” to win.
Seems to me, since democrats are now in the minority, they might want to fight with ideas not incendiary words and protests. They should want their party to have a modicum of ethics and morality and not be against everything Trump because everything he is doing is exactly why he was elected. Memo to democrats: figure out why you didn’t win because fighting against the guy that won is like tilting at windmills.
By voting YES on 50 we would be voting against our own constitution in California. Expediency because of what Texas did? How ridiculous is that? It isn’t “fighting back” against anything except our own Constitution.
BTW, no one has the vapors. We just recognize “fighting back” does make you, the guys who are for all the things voters were against in the last election, kinda out of step which makes you look “bad”.
Just remember, if a republican is ever put in as governor of California that yes vote you cast now may be used against you later..
VOTE NO ON 50…!!!
(and also shame on New York)
Well this press release is an encapsulation of political division. The liberal Democrats (?) worry that those awful Trumpers (?) will try to intimidate voters who aren’t even standing in line by wearing caps with various ominous phrases on them anywhere on the planet apparently. Does this mean the bearers of such are responsible for people being confused? They certainly will be arrested since confusion is rampant right now. How can a law exist that makes someone liable for others not even contacted being confused?
More concerning is the bit about “The right to get help casting your ballot from anyone you choose, except from your employer or union representative.” Ever since PBS ran a special on elections years ago where a campaign worker was door knocking stumping for a candidate and she ran into an older couple with no English who told her they weren’t mailing in their ballots because they didn’t understand what was going on. Sharing their language, she sat down with them and explained it to them, helped them mark their ballot and then took them to deliver them to the ballot drop box. Oh and got the names of anyone who the couple knew who had trouble with English so she could do the same for them. In the end she collect about 25 such assisted ballots. Maybe campaigns are more of a threat to voting integrity than people in hats?
The same people saying “Yes to 50 ” were all gung ho for the $30,000,000 non-partisan California’s Citizens Redistricting Commission (CRC) 15 years ago.Talk about buyer’s remorse, and dare I say, hypocrisy!
We like the CRC.
And it will be back after this election.
Prop 50 is a direct response to Texas’ undemocratic manipulation of the electoral process.
I don’t believe in starting a fight.
But when attacked, fight back.
You are obviously in control of nothing and can’t guarantee anything.
That may be true, but organisms including humans on the Earth survive by adapting what worked 15 years ago and was appropriate at that time may not be the smartest course of action in the present.
Things change. Both political parties have changed. It might behoove a person to acknowledge the reality of the present moment and respond accordingly.
So ‘adapting’ means tossing out the very reforms you once claimed were sacred??
How can people advocate trashing the will of people that said ‘voters not politicians’ then flush 30 million $ and burn the rulebook just because Texas played dirty?
Either principles matter or they don’t.
No one likes a cheater. And if the Democrat party can’t gain any leverage without cheating, f*** ’em. They made their bed.