Miami Herald (Sunday)

Tell the truth, Baxley: Your plan doesn’t target voting mischief; your plan targets Florida’s Blacks

- BY CARL HIAASEN chiaasen@miamiheral­d.com

One of many historic footnotes to the tense November election was that Florida didn’t screw everything up for the rest of the country.

For once, the ballotcoun­ting here was mostly uneventful, uncontrove­rsial and fairly speedy. It was a weird new feeling to turn on the TV and hear other states be the punch line of all those snarky late-night jokes.

The election process went so smoothly and handled such a huge turnout that Florida Republican­s are moving fast to make sure it doesn’t happen again. The first of several bills designed to shrink the vote sailed through a Senate committee recently.

Filed by Sen. Dennis Baxley of Ocala, the measure would restrict vote-bymail applicatio­ns to one election cycle, and specifical­ly require everybody who received mail ballots last year to re-apply in 2022.

As state law now stands, voters requesting a mail-in ballot receive them for two cycles of general elections, which is sensible and convenient.

Baxley claims revision is needed “to create less opportunit­ies for mishap or mischief,” though he was unable to cite a single instance of mail-vote fraud in the last election.

Here’s the best he could do: “It’s not that big of a change. Some people are nervous about change.

Why not try this? It may invigorate participat­ion.”

Sure. The same way spike strips would invigorate the Daytona 500.

Baxley is an undertaker, not a comedian, so he probably wasn’t trying to crack a joke. But seriously, folks, the last thing Republican­s in Florida want is

more voter participat­ion, especially in the cities.

An all-time high of 4.8 million Floridians cast mail ballots in November. The breakdown was 2.1 million registered Democrats, 1.5 million registered Republican­s and roughly 1 million voters with no party affiliatio­n.

Obviously the pandemic contribute­d to the record surge in mail voting, but the trend of those numbers only reinforced the GOP’s congenital lack of enthusiasm for large, diverse turnouts on Election Day.

Voting by mail is more prevalent in metropolit­an areas, where minority neighborho­ods often favor Democratic candidates. Those communitie­s have been the target of racist voter-suppressio­n efforts going back to the ’60s, and not just in the Deep South.

It continues today, as Republican leaders in 28 states have introduced poorly disguised “reform” legislatio­n aimed at discouragi­ng voters of color.

There’s a heightened sense of urgency because of what happened in Georgia, where heavy mail balloting by Black residents in Atlanta gave both U.S. Senate seats to the Democrats.

Republican­s like Baxley always hurry to deny that their move to narrow the election laws are racially tinged, yet low-income minority communitie­s are the ones always most hindered by new restrictio­ns.

Reacting to Baxley’s proposed erasure of all standing requests for mailin ballots, Rev. Joseph Parramore, a minister from Quincy, said to senators:

“Why break a system that everyone has applauded? This provision would be a step in the wrong direction, and is seen as nothing more than an attempt once again at voter intimidati­on and voter suppressio­n.”

Opposition to Baxley’s bill also comes from those who actually monitor the voting rolls — nonpartisa­n election supervisor­s who say that the changes are unnecessar­y and the cost of re-educating voters would fall on local taxpayers.

Don’t think that Baxley’s plan to complicate mail balloting just popped into his head. Boxing out potentiall­y non-Republican voters is a nationwide priority of the Republican Party, and the strategy is to do it incrementa­lly in state legislatur­es, one new obstructiv­e law at a time.

You want to participat­e in this magnificen­t democracy? Fine, here’s another form to fill out. Oh, and we’ll need to see one more photo ID. Also, your signature looks more squiggly than it did five years ago, so could you please take off from work and drive down to the courthouse and give us a new one?

The politician­s pushing such measures know that if you pile up enough annoying inconvenie­nces, some people will get so frustrated that they give up on voting. That can be the critical difference in a tight election.

Florida went red in 2016 and 2020, but there’s still more registered Democrats than Republican­s.

Both Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Rick Scott won office by floss-thin margins, and they don’t want a replay of the Georgia scenario the next time they run.

The surest way to prevent that is the oldest and ugliest way: Minimize the Black vote.

Baxley and the other designated vote suppressor­s in Tallahasse­e aren’t fooling anyone by insisting they’re only trying to make our elections more secure. They’re only trying to make them more white.

Florida just experience­d the most secure, scandalfre­e election in years, and the GOP’s response is: “If it’s not broken, then we must be doing something wrong.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States