Orlando Sentinel

Florida asks judge to kick himself off elections law case

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — Saying he “appears to have a closed mind,” the state has asked a federal judge to remove himself from a case about the constituti­onality of a 2023 Florida elections law.

Attorneys for Secretary of State Cord Byrd last week filed a motion seeking the recusal of Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker, pointing to parts of a ruling he issued Feb. 8 in a separate court battle about a 2021 elections law.

In that ruling, Walker entered a judgment in favor of the state after the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned his earlier decision that the law improperly discrimina­ted against Black voters.

But Walker also wrote that the state “has, with surgical precision, repeatedly changed Florida’s election code to target whichever modality of voting Florida’s Black voters were using at the time. That was not this court’s opinion — it is a fact establishe­d by the record in these cases (involving the 2021 law). Even so, following the state of Florida’s appeal, this persistent and pernicious practice of targeting the modalities of voting most used by Florida’s Black voters has apparently received the stamp of approval in this (11th) Circuit.”

Three consolidat­ed lawsuits challengin­g the 2023 law allege that the state has placed improper restrictio­ns on what are known as “third party” voter registrati­on organizati­ons. Plaintiffs contend that the organizati­ons play an important role in signing up Black and Hispanic voters.

In the motion for recusal, the state’s attorneys cited Walker’s descriptio­n of a “persistent and pernicious practice” related to Black voters.

“Plaintiffs in these consolidat­ed proceeding­s must prove that the state of Florida intentiona­lly targeted third-party voter registrati­on organizati­ons because Black voters prefer to use them,” the motion said. “But this court (Walker) has seemingly concluded that the state of Florida engages in discrimina­tion against Black voters. On the discrimina­tory-intent issue, therefore, this court appears to have a closed mind.”

If Walker recuses himself, another judge would take over the case, which is scheduled for trial in April.

The groups and other plaintiffs filed the lawsuits after Gov. Ron

DeSantis and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e last year approved the elections law. The plaintiffs argue the law violates First Amendment rights.

In a July ruling, Walker issued a preliminar­y injunction against two changes in the law. They would prevent non-U.S. citizens from collecting or handling voter-registrati­on applicatio­ns and make it a felony for voter-registrati­on group workers to keep personal informatio­n of voters.

The state has appealed that ruling to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where it remains pending.

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