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HomeElections CodeDiv. 20Ch. 1§ 20001 Political Party Regulation Framework

§ 20001 Political Party Regulation Framework

Elections Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 20001 Political Party Regulation Framework

This law says that political parties must be regulated by the state, especially their structure and how they run primaries, and it stops groups from pretending to be official party bodies when they’re just private groups.

Key Takeaways

  • •Political parties must follow state rules for their organization and primary processes.
  • •The state creates conventions and committees for parties that can hold direct primaries.
  • •Groups cannot mislead voters by pretending their endorsements are official party statements.

Example

A group calls itself 'Democratic Voters for Change' and puts up signs saying 'Official Democratic Party endorsement of Candidate Y'

The law says that if a group uses a party name but isn’t the official party committee, it can’t make it look like it’s the party’s official endorsement, so voters aren’t fooled.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 20001 Political Party Regulation Framework

The Legislature hereby finds the following to be true: (1) The major political parties have become an integral part of the American governmental system requiring regulation as to their structure, governing bodies, and functions by state government in the public interest. (2) The Legislature has found it necessary and appropriate in the regulation of political parties to create and provide for the convening of state conventions, state central committees, and county central committees for parties qualified by law to participate in the direct primary election, by statute. (3) Over the several years preceding the adoption of this section organizations of electors using as a part of their names the name of a political party qualified to participate in the direct primary election have endorsed candidates for nomination of that party for partisan office in the direct primary election and have publicized and promulgated the endorsements in a manner that has resulted in considerable public doubt and confusion as to whether the endorsements are those of a private group of citizens or of an official governing body of a political party. (4) The voting public is entitled to protection by law from deception in political campaigns in the same manner and for the same reasons that it is entitled to protection from deception by advertisers of commercial products. (Enacted by Stats. 1994, Ch. 920, Sec. 2.)

Last verified: January 10, 2026

Key Terms

major political partiesstate conventionsstate central committeescounty central committees

Related Statutes

  • § 10 Secretary Voter Registration Duties
  • § 15001 Election Vote Program Submission
  • § 3021.5 Emergency Worker Absentee Voting
  • § 1 Elections Code Title
  • § 10.5 Elections Cybersecurity And Misinformation

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Elections Code. Section 20001.
View Official Source