Voting Early in Florida Harder Under New, Restrictive Law
African-American civic groups, politicians and church
leaders are concerned that changes in Florida’s early
voting schedule will lower minority turnout, which
could mean fewer votes for Democrats in November.
Florida’s early, in-person voting period almost
certainly will shrink this fall. Since 2004, when the
state began early voting, county election officials had
to provide a minimum of 14 voting days, or 96 hours, of
early voting opportunities, including limited weekend
hours. Under a law passed in 2011, counties can still
offer 96 hours of early voting, but those hours cannot
be spread over more than the state-required eight days.
The 2011 law also eliminated voting on the Sunday
before the election, which was offered by 10 of the
state’s 67 counties in 2008. African-American churches
traditionally reserved that day for “Souls to the
Polls” campaigns, in which voters went from churches to
early-voting sites.
“We do believe it’s a deliberate attempt to
disenfranchise the voters,” said state Rep. Barbara
Watson, a Democrat from Miami Gardens, concerned about
the law’s effect on turnout in large counties such as
Miami-Dade.
Rep. Dennis Baxley, a Republican from Ocala who
sponsored the legislative change, said that eliminating
Sunday hours was about timing.
“It seems like we had too tight a squeeze (before
Election Day on Tuesday),” he said. “You had to count
the early votes and be all set up in the counties for a
general election in two days. What’s the big deal? It’s
just a scheduling issue.”
President Barack Obama won 96 percent of Florida’s
black vote in 2008. African Americans that year cast 22
percent of the state’s early in-person votes, although
they were only 13 percent of registered voters,
according to an analysis by Daniel Smith, a University
of Florida political science professor, and Michael
Herron of Dartmouth.
Democratic turnout for early and absentee voting in
Florida increased 5 percent from 2004 to 2008, while
Republican early votes dropped 6 percent, according to
data compiled by Michael McDonald, a political
scientist at George Mason University.
“What we have to do is act like that old Florida
chameleon that changes colors,” said Elder Lee Harris,
68, pastor of Mount Olive Primitive Baptist Church in
Jacksonville. “We have to adapt to whatever our
environment is.”
Harris said his church and its 300-member congregation
joined another 60 churches to encourage Sunday voting
the weekend before the 2008 presidential election. He
said the group will organize on one of the other
weekend days this year.
State Sen. Chris Smith, a Democrat who represents
Broward and Palm Beach counties, is encouraging
churches in his district to hold services on Saturdays
during early voting.
Voters like Anita Smith, 38, of Gainesville, enjoy the
convenience of voting early.
“I didn’t want to be in the long lines,” said Smith,
who voted early in the 2008 primary and general
elections. “I went early and got it out of the way.”
In Palm Beach County, Supervisor of Elections Susan
Bucher wants to keep turnout near 2008 early-voting
levels. She plans to open two additional early voting
sites, which she said will cost $52,000 for voting
machines and salaries.
Rodney Long, a retired Democratic politician in
northern Florida’s Alachua County, said his group, the
African American Accountability Alliance, will organize
church and political leaders for early voting.
“If you tell me that there’s a problem with that
Sunday, there should be some evidence. There’s 67
people in Florida who could provide it. (Lawmakers) did
not receive any testimony from the 67 county officials
about Sunday processing. Everyone’s voting
electronically – no more chads, no delays,” Long said.
Andrea Rumbaugh of News21 contributed to this
story.
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