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Madame Secretary

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By Tanu Henry | California Black Media

In December 2020, Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Dr. Shrley Weber California’s 31st Secretary of State (SOS), the state’s chief election official. Weber has been a central and influential figure in California politics for years. She was an Assemblymember representing the 79th District in San Diego County and chaired the California Legislative Black Caucus (CLBC). In the Legislature, she introduced one of the strictest laws governing police use of deadly force in the country, along with a bill that set up the Task Force to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African-Americans.

As SOS, Weber is responsible for conducting elections in all 58 counties, managing the operations of the State Archives, and keeping a registry of businesses and nonprofits statewide.

“We passed legislation that gives everybody a vote by mail ballot, and we’ve seen that it works” says Weber, sharing details about a major electoral policy change she has implemented as SOS. “We have to make sure that every eligible Californian not only gets the right to vote, but that they are registered to vote and that they show up.”

California Black Media interviewed Weber at her Sacramento office:

Question: The U.S. Senate did not pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. Why is that significant and why are voting rights so important in America right now?

Answere: When Gov. Newsom asked me to be Secretary of State, the first thing that popped in my mind was voting rights. This wasn’t a position that I had lobbied for. We had made some tremendous changes in the Assembly and passed some groundbreaking legislation. Speaking to a reporter last December 22nd , I said this is a critical time because our nation is in peril. And he goes, “what do you mean?” I said, “our democracy is in crisis.” He didn’t understand. When January 6 hit (the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol), people understood. I recognize this is a difficult and unique time for people in the nation, extremely difficult for African-Americans, because most of us who have parents or we ourselves have lived through this struggle for voting rights. My family understood the power of voting. My parents came out of Arkansas where they never got a chance to vote. My dad was an adult with six kids before he actually got a chance to register to vote in California.

Q: What can ordinary Californians who care about expanding and protecting voting rights do?

A: We need to pay attention. We must fight laws that make it difficult for people to vote. Even though we don’t have that legislation coming out of our Legislature, we have people putting initiatives on the ballot. California has expanded voting rights so much that people want to limit it. There’s only one group that can’t vote in this state: those who are physically in prison. Everyone else who meets the eligibility requirements in California can vote. And that frightens some people.

Q: You’ve been in this job for a year. Do you feel like you’ve accomplished your goals?

A: I didn’t take this position because I needed to be a constitutional officer, or one day become Governor. The question for me was: What does the Secretary of State have to offer in these critical times? And obviously it is the defense of our democracy. I was coming in with the idea that we are going to expand our voting base. We have done that. We’ve also expanded the California Voter Choice Act counties. Half of our counties are Voter Choice Act Counties, which gives us additional resources to go into those counties. They are now outvoting the rest of the counties. Statewide, 88 percent of eligible Californians are registered right now to vote. My goal is to get it to 100 percent.

Q: Is California implementing additional safeguards to make sure irregularities are minimal?

A: Yes, we are. We have a system that verifies votes. We test every machine in California before every election. We make it possible for people to observe the process. They can’t come and start counting themselves. But they can observe. We do all this with transparency. How does it feel to look at that long wall of portraits of past Secretaries of State, and know that your legacy will be enshrined in California history? I’m very grateful. When I was sworn in, somebody said you’re the first African-American after some 170 years. How does that feel? I said, well—what took so long?

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