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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Some early voters regret picks for lost candidates

Scott Martelle Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES – Virginia and Libero Daniel made up their minds more than two weeks ago on whom they would be supporting in California’s presidential primary. So they marked their absentee ballots and mailed them in early.

Both voted for Republican Rudolph W. Giuliani. And then the former New York mayor quit the race.

“I felt like hell,” Virginia Daniel, 80, said Monday, her wasted vote already somewhere in the Los Angeles County elections office.

To the couple, Tuesday’s primary feels as though they headed out to a big party and snagged a good parking spot – only to find that they had the date wrong.

In this volatile primary season, an unknown number of people already have voted for candidates who are no longer in the race. Others find that after voting absentee, they changed their minds about which candidate they support.

“You get a call or two saying, ‘I’d like to get my ballot back,’ ” said Stephen Weir, president of the California Association of Clerks and Election Officials.

Those with the greatest remorse, it seems, are those who voted for the politically dead.

Some are angry at themselves and at their candidate.

“He quit too soon,” said John Edwards supporter Mildred Zollinger, 87, of Porterville in Tulare County.

Some, like Virginia Daniel, are disappointed, “and I know a couple of other people who say the same thing.”

But some, like her husband, are sanguine about the inadvertent decision to disenfranchise themselves.

“I would have rather been able to vote for somebody that’s on the ticket,” said Libero Daniel, 90, a retired engineer for the City of Los Angeles. “That’s the way the game goes, I guess.”

Although mail-in voting is expected to be a record high for a primary in California, the ballots haven’t been arriving particularly early, said Weir, Contra Costa County’s clerk-recorder.

In all, about 4.1 million mail-in ballots are expected – nearly half of what Weir said is the state’s anticipated voter turnout. More than 1 million of the outstanding absentee ballots, Weir said, probably will be dropped off at polls or arrive in the mail today. Lynn Struiksma, 39, of Los Angeles didn’t wait to cast his vote.

He liked Edwards’ focus on poverty issues and mailed in his ballot the day before the former North Carolina senator withdrew.

Struiksma has “absolutely” no regrets, he said, because he’s working on a film production today and would have trouble getting to the polls anyway. And he hasn’t paid much attention to the race since mailing his ballot in, knowing his decision was made – and moot.

“I don’t know which way I would be persuaded if I had to go vote right now,” Struiksma said.

David Goss, a retired aircraft machinist from Atascadero, said he has no second thoughts about his early vote for Hillary Rodham Clinton in the Democratic race, despite the drama driven by Barack Obama’s rise in the polls.

“I know how my 401(k) did under her husband,” Goss said of the New York senator and former first lady. “I think she’d make the best leader.”