logo
'Denying people's voices': Quintal files bill to change mail-in ballot rules after recount

'Denying people's voices': Quintal files bill to change mail-in ballot rules after recount

Yahoo23-07-2025
After both the official voting results and a recount failed to secure him an election victory, former Republican State Representative candidate and current Taunton City Councilor Larry Quintal said he has filed legislation in the state senate to amend current mail-in ballot policies.
The legislation, submitted July 9 by State Senator Kelly Dooner, would require mail-in ballots postmarked by the day of the election to be counted in special elections, according to a press release issued by Quintal.
'Like all by-request legislation, I filed this bill at the request of a constituent. It's important that residents and local officials in my district have the opportunity to bring their ideas forward through the legislative process,' said Dooner, in an email statement, on why she chose to file legislation from her former co-City Councilor.
Why this legislation?
The initial official results of the June 10 special state election race for State Representative showed Democrat Lisa Field winning by 17 votes. A recount held on June 30, 2025, in Easton and July 2, 2025, in Taunton, narrowed the gap to 15 votes, but Field still retained the majority and remained the victor.
Quintal said Taunton's Elections Office disqualified 20 mail-in ballots because the ballots were not received by the office before the deadline. 'In my race, 20 Tauntonians were denied their voice.'
Over in Easton, Denise Morgan, principal clerk for Easton's Town Clerk's Office, told The Gazette that five mail-in ballots were disqualified from the election for not being received in time.
Marc Pacheco, director of elections for Taunton's Elections Department, confirmed the disqualified 20 mail-in ballots. He said, when it comes to special elections, per state law, all voting ballots submitted by mail must be received by the city or town clerk prior to the closing of polls, which was 8 p.m., on the day of the election held on June 10.
Those 20 mail-in ballots were not received by the elections office in time to be counted. 'The law is clear and we followed the law.'
Furthermore, in a June 12 press release after the special election, Pacheco said, 'The only other ballots that could possibly be counted after election day for a special state election would be provisional ballots and ballots postmarked from overseas,' said Pacheco.
In a written statement Quintal said the legislation filed aims to amend Massachusetts General Law Chapter 54 section 25B to bring it in line with the counting of ballots in November state elections.
'It makes no sense that ballots for November state elections are counted up to four days afterwards while in a special election they are tossed aside. We should not be denying people's voices in a state special election by treating them differently from a normal state election,' he said.
State representative district covers parts of Easton, Taunton
The 3rd Bristol District consists of parts of Taunton and parts of Easton:
Easton: Precincts 4A, 5, and 6
Taunton: Ward 1 Precincts A, B, Ward 2, Ward 5, Ward 7 and Ward 8
A secure system
Pacheco said the 20 disqualified mail-in ballots, per state requirements, 'are still sealed in their outer secrecy envelope. No one but these voters themselves know who they voted for.'
When reached for comment, Holly Robichaud, who handles communication for Quintal, said there is no definitive way of knowing the voting results of the disqualified ballots. 'The 20 mail-in ballots remain sealed. However, 20 is more than the margin in this race. If they had been counted, they could have changed the results,' she said via email.
Pacheco also said there is no pattern or way of deducing how many certified mail-in ballots voted for either Quintal or Field due to how the voting system works.
'Vote by mail ballots and absentee ballots are separated from their outer secrecy envelopes and placed into the ballot optical scanner and vote tabulator in the same manner that election day ballots are cast. Therefore, there is no way to know who voted for which candidate,' he said.
For future elections
Robichaud said the legislation isn't an attempt to overturn the election results. 'We cannot go back retroactively,' she said, adding that the legislation is about ensuring that mail-in ballots for special elections are counted and have the same boundaries as with state elections.
That being said, Robichaud did acknowledge that 'Larry [Quintal] is seriously considering running again' in the 2026 election for State Rep., and 'We believe that he would win in a regular election where all the ballots are counted.'
Moving forward
Lisa Field declined to comment on Quintal's proposed legislation or press release. She was sworn in as 3rd Bristol District's new State Representative on Wednesday, July 16. "I am very excited to get to work on behalf of the constituents of the 3rd Bristol."
With additional reporting from Emma Rindlisbacher
This article originally appeared on The Taunton Daily Gazette: Larry Quintal files legislation regarding mail-in voting special elections
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pine Belt chooses Republican candidates for special election in MS Senate. See who won
Pine Belt chooses Republican candidates for special election in MS Senate. See who won

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Pine Belt chooses Republican candidates for special election in MS Senate. See who won

In a surprising upset in the Tuesday, Aug. 5, Republican primary for the Senate District 42 special election, Don Hartness unseated incumbent Sen. Robin Robinson. In 2023, Robinson defeated Hartness in the Mississippi Senate District 42 race, winning with nearly 56% of the vote to Hartness' 44%. This time, Hartness won more than 70% of the vote in the three-person race that also included candidate RJ Robinson. A candidate needs to have 50% plus one vote to have the majority when there are multiple candidates in a primary. Otherwise a runoff election will be held between the two candidates who gained the most votes. In this instance, Hartness won far more than the minimum number of votes to win the primary outright. Since there are no opposing candidates for District 42 in the November special election, Hartness will take over the office from Robinson in January. In Senate District 44, Chris Johnson, the current senator for District 45, won a narrow victory over his opponent Patrick Lott, despite sparking a controversy earlier this year when he was accused of alienating the affection of a doctor's wife. Johnson received about 54% of the vote to Lott's 46%. Johnson will face Democratic challenger Shakita Taylor in November's special election. Results are unofficial until they are certified by the Mississippi Secretary of State's office. Here's how they voted: Senate District 42 Don Hartness: 4,246 votes or 70.7% Robin Robinson: 1,676 votes or 27.9% RJ Robinson: 84 votes or 1.4% Senate District 44 Chris Johnson: 2,282 votes or 53.8% Patrick Lott: 1,961 votes or 46.2% The special election was called after a federal judge ruled the 2021 redistricting plan was flawed. The legislative election held in 2023 was based on the 2021 district lines, following the 2020 Census. Those districts were challenged in 2022, and a federal court agreed that they diluted the Black vote in Mississippi. State lawmakers were ordered to go back to the drawing board to create new district lines in three areas of the state, with two centered on Senate districts and the third on the House of Representatives. The new plan was approved in May, and a special election was scheduled for November. The NAACP, which had filed the lawsuit challenging the redistricting, did not agree with the plans submitted for the Senate in DeSoto County nor the House of Representatives in the Golden Triangle, and appealed the three-judge panel ruling. The new plan for redistricting in the Hattiesburg area was not challenged. Other Pine Belt Senate races on the November ballot In addition to Senate Districts 42 and 44, the following races will also be on the November ballot: Incumbent Sen. Juan Barnett, D-Heidelberg, is running unopposed in District 34. Incumbent Sen. Joey Fillingane, R-Sumrall, is running unopposed in District 41. Hattiesburg attorney Anna Rush, a Republican, and former Hattiesburg mayor Johnny DuPree, a Democrat, are seeking the Senate District 45 seat. Lici Beveridge is a reporter for the Hattiesburg American and Clarion Ledger. Contact her at lbeveridge@ Follow her on X @licibev or Facebook at This article originally appeared on Hattiesburg American: Hartness, Johnson win Republican primary elections near Hattiesburg

Where the Redistricting Wars Might Go After Texas
Where the Redistricting Wars Might Go After Texas

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Where the Redistricting Wars Might Go After Texas

The walkout of Democratic lawmakers from the Texas Legislature may ultimately fail to prevent Republican legislators from forcing through new political maps drawn to swing five U.S. House seats to that party. But the public contretemps has accomplished one big thing for the Democrats. By drawing attention to the gerrymander in Texas, they have bought time for other states to follow Texas' lead. That could help Democrats blunt the Republican advantage out of Texas, though Republicans are pushing for new maps in other states they dominate, potentially with fewer obstacles. On Wednesday, dozens of Democratic legislators attending the annual National Conference of State Legislatures meeting in Boston rallied in front of the Massachusetts Statehouse, some holding signs reading, 'Texas Is First. Your State Is Next.' Here's a list of states that are considering redistricting, and what might (or might not) happen. Potential Democratic Gerrymanders Gov. Gavin Newsom is proposing that the Legislature ask the public to vote on new maps this fall and to temporarily set aside the state's independent mapmaking commission — but only if the Texas gerrymander succeeds. State lawmakers could vote on a plan the week of Aug. 18 that could flip as many as five Republican House seats to the Democrats, a numerical counter to Texas. If voters approve the maps, they would stay in place only through 2030. Gov. JB Pritzker, who has hosted the Texas Democratic holdouts in Illinois and urged national Democrats to join them in solidarity, could call a special session of the Illinois General Assembly this month. The state's maps are already tilted heavily toward Democrats, thanks to Illinois's redistricting effort in 2021 to give more seats to Democrats, who now hold 14 of the state's 17 congressional seats. Drawing out even one more Republican would be difficult. David Moon, the majority leader of Maryland's House of Delegates, plans to introduce a bill that would allow Maryland to embark on redistricting if any other state did the same 'outside of the regular decennial census period.' Only one of Maryland's eight House seats is held by a Republican, though, and Republican legislators have blasted any such proposal, which they said would lead to 'absolutely zero Republican representation.' Turning that one seat blue would be tricky, since mapmakers would have to stretch that district from the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay to the Democratic western side. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store