Florida Congressman Demands Gov. Rick Scott ‘Immediately Suspend’ Voter Purge

Judd Legum
Think Progress / News Report
Published: Thursday 24 May 2012
Florida Congressman Ted Deutch told ThinkProgress today that Gov. Rick Scott is currently involved in a massive effort to purge up to 180,000 from the voting rolls.
Article image

Florida Congressman Ted Deutch (D) told ThinkProgress today that Gov. Rick Scott was engaging in a “blatant attempt to supress voter turnout.” Scott is currently involved in a massive effort to purge up to 180,000 from the voting rolls. The list, purportedly of non-citizens, has proven unreliable. Earlier this week, Seminole County Supervisor of Elections Mike Ertel, a Republican, posted a picture on Twitter of a voter on the list falsely identified as ineligible, with his passport.

Congressman Deutch said that his office has heard from several constituents who have recieved a voting ineligibility letter in error. In light of these errors, Deutch will soon send a letter to Scott demanding the purge be immediatly suspended. An excerpt:

It is out of grave concern that we write to ask for the immediate suspension of the Florida Division of Elections’ directive that county supervisors of elections purge up to 180,000 names from Florida’s voter rolls in advance of the November 2012 elections.

While we all agree that the right to vote should be reserved only to those who are eligible, any process that could strip Floridians of their voting rights should be conducted with the utmost caution and transparency, and certainly not within six months of a major federal election and within 90 days of the primary.Providing a list of names with questionable validity – created with absolutely no oversight – to county supervisors and asking that they purge their rolls will create chaotic results and further undermine Floridians’ confidence in the integrity of our elections. A rushed process will undermine both Florida and federal law requiring voter rolls to be maintained in a uniform and nondiscriminatory manner.

The letter was circulated to the entire Florida Congressional delegation and Deutch expects several of his colleagues to sign on. Deutch noted that while Florida has “no history of mass voter fraud” it does have a history of “mass voter disenfranchisement” that proceeded the presidential election in 2000.

In 1998, Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris hired a private company to create a “scrub list” of duplicate registrations, deceased voters and felons prohibited from voting in Florida. The company’s list, however, was riddled with errors. One person flagged as a felon by the list was actually a Florida judge. A county elections supervisor discovered the list was unreliable when she received an erroneous letter informing her that she was a felon and could not vote. By one estimate, 7000 Florida voters were wrongfully removed from the voter rolls for the 2000 presidential election — 13 times George W. Bush’s margin of victory in that state after the Supreme Court halted the post-election recount.

Deutch said that, in this election, “Governor Scott wants to play the role of Katherine Harris.”

African-Americans made up 88 percent of the voters removed from the rolls in the purge that preceeded the 2000 election, even though they account for only about 11 percent of Florida voters. In Florida, 93 percent of black voters cast a ballot for Al Gore.



Get Email Alerts from NationofChange

Top Stories

7 comments on "Florida Congressman Demands Gov. Rick Scott ‘Immediately Suspend’ Voter Purge"

Deborah Kitzul

May 24, 2012 8:11pm

Typical Republican underhanded tactics. If they cannot win an election honestly, they fall back on their old reliable dirty tricks to get what they want. What I fail to understand is why is Rick Scott not locked up in a federal penitentiary for Medicare and Medicaid fraud he committed with his medical businesses just before he ran for the position he currently has.

It is an insult to the American people that we send our kids into other parts of the world interfering with how those countries are run and with the false claims of protecting the voting rights of people in those countries and making certain that those elections are honest. Yet, on the other hand, we are loosing our voting rights by those who are expert at cheating and stealing elections because they would not win if they did things honestly.

steve dewitt

May 24, 2012 7:09pm

Wow! 7000 voters in a state of over 19 million. What are the odds? What I found interesting is the fact that 89% of felons in florida are african american
odds; .000037

pitch1934

May 24, 2012 6:11pm

These stinking repugnants have no f-g shame. They are not embarrassed at all by the low and dirty tricks they pull. They shit on the Constitution and say they are preserving it. I always new that the Fl count was rigged. There is more than enough to put some people in jail for a long time, if only the feds would act.

Ronni85

May 24, 2012 4:09pm

The feds need to move in and put a stop to this obscenely obvious effort to rig the election. Betcha there were NO repugnants removed the last time, nor on the list to be removed this time. That alone says fraud. Why are these criminals never prosecuted for their crimes? The governor and the supervisor of elections need to be prosecuted - set an example for the rest of the country.

oldhat

May 24, 2012 1:32pm

stop removing dead people from voter list

Riconui

May 24, 2012 1:18pm

For those whose knowledge of history is more than two news cycles, we can remember the 2000 election, moreover, we can remember what history books have told us about post Civil War election flim-flams and calculated efforts to keep blacks in that state from voting. Some of the most insidious efforts ever devised to disenfranchise black voters have been staged in the state of Florida, so this is not exactly news to hear that a bought-and-paid-for hack like Scott is attempting to muscle Democratic voters off the rolls or taking measures to insure that their votes will not see the light of day. Conservatives don't like anything with democracy in the title, including democracy. Conservatives don't believe in governance, they believe in Rule. Conservatives in Florida don't seem to believe that black people can or should be allowed to vote. Apparently they are not equipped with sufficient knowledge to pick the right candidate, or more importantly, the "far right" candidate. Their claims of trying to head off "voter fraud" is itself a fraud. There is no record of voter fraud that would warrant the measures they seem determined to institute. They are conservatives and they want it all, and they want it right now. It's simple really.

anono

May 24, 2012 12:55pm

Maybe the ice caps will melt enough by November's rigged election that Florida will be washed away by rising sea levels.