The following general standards shall apply in the counting
of all ballots and votes regardless of the vote tabulation method used, for the
initial count, 1 percent manual tally, and any recount.
(a) A ballot that is not marked as provided
by law must be segregated and counted in the manner directed by the elections
official and as required by law. Any ballot that contains personal information,
or that is torn, bent, or mutilated shall be segregated as directed by the
elections official and a duplicate ballot shall be prepared pursuant to
Elections Code section 15210. A ballot that contains marks or markings not
related to an indication of the vote choice for a contest and that are not
personal information shall be counted. Duplication is not required unless the
ballot contains personal information, or the condition of the ballot or
markings on the ballot interfere with the ability of the vote tabulation
equipment to tally the ballot.
(b)
A vote for any candidate or ballot measure shall not be rejected solely because
the voter failed to follow instructions for marking the ballot. If, for any
reason, it is impossible to determine the choice of the voter for any candidate
or ballot measure, the vote for that candidate or ballot measure shall be
considered void.
(c) A mark is
considered valid when it is clear that it represents the voter's choice and is
the technique consistently used by the voter to indicate their selections.
(1) Such marks may include, but are not
limited to, properly filled-in voting position targets, checkmarks, X's,
circles, arrows, or any other clear indication of the voter's choice, such as
the word "yes" next to a candidate's name or a voting position target for a
ballot measure.
(2) Conversely, a
mark crossed out by the voter, or the word "no" next to a candidate's name or a
voting position target for a ballot measure shall not be considered to be a
valid vote but will, instead, be deemed an indication that the voter did not
choose to cast a vote for that candidate or measure.
(d) In determining the validity of a
partially filled-in voting position target, the consistency of a voter's marks
on the entire ballot shall be taken into consideration. A "hesitation mark"
such as a dot in the voting position target shall not be considered a valid
mark unless it is demonstrated that the voter consistently marked their ballot
in such a manner.
(e) If a contest
is marked with more choices than there are offices to be filled or measures
that may prevail, the vote shall not be counted for that contest, but shall be
counted in all other contests in which there is no overvote and the voter's
choice can be clearly determined.
(f) If a contest is marked with fewer choices
than there are offices to be filled or measures that may prevail, the vote
choice(s) for all otherwise properly marked candidates or measures shall be
counted.
(g) Write-in votes shall
be counted pursuant to the provisions established in Elections Code sections
14420, 15342 and 15342.5.