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Voter Guides

Fact check: President Trump called LA's vote count into question. What you should know

A sign reads: "Voting Solutions for All People" above a list of election laws. To the right people cast ballots at voting stations.
Voters cast ballots at the Los Angeles County Registrar in Norwalk on June 1.
(
Frederic J. Brown
/
AFP via Getty Images
)
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Editor's note

In a primetime address to the nation Thursday night, President Donald Trump cited L.A.'s mayoral and gubernatorial primary elections as "one example of the insanity" of how Americans currently vote. The speech, which lasted under 30 minutes, was focused on Trump's longstanding accusations of fraud in U.S. elections — claims that have not been substantiated.

Here's what Trump said, as it relates specifically to our local and state primary election:

"Hundreds of thousands of non-citizens and dead people are listed and active on the voter rolls, and yet we still have elections with no voter ID, no proof of citizenship, and tens of millions of ballots floating aimlessly through the mail. As one example of the insanity, California's recent election for mayor of LA and governor was held on June 2nd, a long time ago, but it was just completed a few days ago on July 10th. Think of that much more than one month. It took a month to count the votes. I wonder what they were doing. This is worse than any third world country. There's no third world country that has elections like we have."

What follows is a fact check of how elections are run in California and details on why the process takes as long as it does. Bottom line: California's count is slow to ensure all ballots cast are counted. This explainer was originally published June 2, 2026, and updated July 16 with reaction to President Trump's address.

The state is often knocked by the rest of the country as being "slow" to count votes. But here's the deal: that's a feature, not a bug, of the election system.

The backstory

Things take a while here largely because California works so hard to expand the ways people can vote. For example:

  • Californians in recent years overwhelmingly vote by mail — nearly 90% of votes cast in the 2024 presidential election were mail-in ballots. In that same year's primary the percentage was just as high. Those ballots can be postmarked up to and including Election Day. They're counted as long as the ballot arrives within seven days (for the June primary, that was June 9).
  • California offers same-day voter registration at any voting center. These new voters must cast a provisional ballot, which is counted once election officials confirm their eligibility (they are overwhelmingly accepted — for example, Los Angeles County reports that historically between 85% to 90% have been counted.)
  • Voters also have the right to cast provisional ballots if there's any problem on Election Day — like if poll workers aren't able to void an outstanding mail-in ballot, or if there’s any issue calling up voter information from e-pollbooks. Again (see above), provisionals take longer to process because eligibility has to be confirmed.
  • Vote-by-mail ballots require signature matching. When the one received doesn't match the one on file, county registrars must contact that voter to let them know — and give them the chance to correct it.
  • And, with more than 23 million registered voters, we're really, really big. In the 2024 general election more than 16 million Californians voted (down from nearly 18 million in the 2020 presidential election). Either way, that’s more people than the total populations of all but three other states.

Why things have sped up, some

But things have sped up considerably in the 30 counties that have adopted a 2016 law called the Voter's Choice Act, including L.A., Orange and Riverside counties. In recent elections, the changes associated with that law — like voters not being locked into a designated polling location — drastically cut down the number of provisional ballots cast, which helped move things along faster than they had before.

Chart shows the count of ballots within two days of a California election on the upswing after dipping to 50% in the June 2022 primary.
A closer look at ballot counting times in California where an increasing number of vote-by-mail ballots has slowed ballot counts.
(
Courtesy California Voter Foundation
)
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Still, accuracy and a commitment to "expanding the franchise" — translation: allowing more people to vote — means the process is not designed to produce instantaneous results.

Official results

The California Secretary of State's Office was required to certify the final vote tallies by July 10, marking the official end of the 2026 primary election.

LAist's Voter Game Plan will be back in the fall to help you prepare for the Nov. 3 general election.

What questions do you have about this election?
You ask, and we'll answer: Whether it's about who's funding the campaigns or how to track your ballot, we're here to help you understand the 2026 election