Orlando Sentinel

Black lawmakers oppose changes to primaries

- By Jim Turner Jim Turner writes for the News Service of Florida.

TALLAHASSE­E – Leaders of the Florida Legislativ­e Black Caucus and a nonprofit group sounded off Tuesday against a proposal going before voters in November that they say will decimate minority representa­tion in the House and Senate.

Amendment 3, which seeks to overhaul Florida’s primary-election system by allowing voters to cast ballots in primaries regardless of party affiliatio­n, would give a disproport­ionate amount of power to primary voters and special interests while diminishin­g the ability of political parties to put forward candidates, leaders of the Black caucus and the group People Over Profits contend.

“What’s in front of us is an amendment that is very, very bad for all of Florida, not just the Florida Legislativ­e Black Caucus,” said Black caucus Chairman Bobby Powell, a Democratic senator from West Palm Beach.

Glenn Burhans, chairman of All Voters Vote, the political committee behind the proposed constituti­onal amendment, said he “respectful­ly and strongly” disagrees with the contention of the caucus members who oppose the measure.

“Today, approximat­ely 1 million Black and Hispanic voters are denied the ability

to vote in meaningful elections simply because they refuse to be forced to join a political party,” Burhans said in a statement. “That denial of the right to vote is wrong. The All Voters Vote amendment will ensure that no registered voter can be denied the right to vote in these taxpayer-funded elections.”

But state Senate Minority Leader Audrey Gibson, DJacksonvi­lle, said the proposal would undermine the 1965 federal Voting Rights Act and the 2010 state Fair Districts Amendment that require the ability for racial minorities to elect candidates who reflect their communitie­s.

“If you’re for Amendment 3, you’re not for the minority community, period,” Gibson said.

The measure’s opponents argue that by allowing Republican and no-party affiliatio­n voters to cast bal

lots in primaries in Democratic-leaning districts, minority candidates would face electorate­s made up of more white voters. While Democratic candidates would still be expected to win the primaries, the chances would increase that those candidates would be white.

In August, People Over Profits released an analysis predicting the proposed change would make it tougher for Black candidates in nearly half of the 17 Black-majority districts in the House and for four Black senators representi­ng majority-minority districts.

“I’m not aware of any Black state senator that represents a district that is not majority black. None,” said People Over Profits Chairman Sean Shaw, a former state lawmaker who ran for attorney general in 2018. “So, it’s not an assumption and it’s not a maybe this will

help. And it’s not that if we lower the voting share that something bad could happen. It’s what currently exists in Florida.”

Shaw added the proposal “misleading­ly” focuses on primaries and the disenfranc­hisement of independen­t voters, who are unable to take part in party primaries under the current system.

“Amendment 3 goes a huge step further than just allowing (no-party affiliatio­n voters) to vote in primaries,” Shaw said. “It allows anybody of any party

to vote in any primary and then the top two vote-getters regardless of party advance to the general election. That is just a gross distortion of the issue of NPAs (no-party affiliatio­n voters) being allowed to vote in primaries.”

Shaw noted that under the proposed amendment, the two gubernator­ial candidates who would have advanced from the 2018 primary would have been Gov. Ron DeSantis and Adam Putnam, both Republican­s.

The votes cast in the 2018 primary were only from

members of the two parties. Shaw said Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Andrew Gillum, who won a seven-way primary with 34.4 percent of the vote, would have needed 58 percent of the independen­t voters to catch Putnam, who finished second in the Republican primary.

All Voters Vote is heavily funded by prominent South Florida health-care executive Mike Fernandez, a former Republican.

 ?? DAN SWEENEY/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? “What’s in front of us is an amendment that is very, very bad for all of Florida, not just the Florida Legislativ­e Black Caucus,” said Black caucus Chairman Bobby Powell, a Democratic senator. Black lawmakers oppose Amendment 3, which seeks to overhaul Florida’s primary-election system by allowing voters to cast ballots in primaries regardless of party.
DAN SWEENEY/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL “What’s in front of us is an amendment that is very, very bad for all of Florida, not just the Florida Legislativ­e Black Caucus,” said Black caucus Chairman Bobby Powell, a Democratic senator. Black lawmakers oppose Amendment 3, which seeks to overhaul Florida’s primary-election system by allowing voters to cast ballots in primaries regardless of party.
 ?? ALAN DIAZ/AP ?? A voter submits his ballot in Hialeah in 2016 primary.
ALAN DIAZ/AP A voter submits his ballot in Hialeah in 2016 primary.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States