Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

More questions on elections despite state’s assurances

- By Paula Dockery Paula Dockery is a syndicated columnist who served in the Florida Legislatur­e for 16 years as a Republican from Lakeland. She is now a registered NPA (no party affiliatio­n). PBDockery@gmail.com.

In a recent column, I warned that we needed to act to protect our elections against enemies foreign and domestic. It was not my intention to sound alarmist, but rather to express my sincere concern for the integrity and fairness of our elections.

Since my column appeared, I have heard from a U.S. attorney in one of Florida’s districts, several supervisor­s of elections, a representa­tive from one of the election machine vendors I mentioned and quite a few readers.

The latest to weigh in was Florida Secretary of State Laurel Lee, who sent a rebuttal of my column to at least one newspaper where my column appeared.

Wow, that really went to the top in short order.

Secretary of State Lee was fairly respectful in her carefully worded response. She was firm in her denials of election system vulnerabil­ities and touted all that has been done to make Florida’s elections safe. I’d like to believe her, but I still have my doubts.

Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed Lee as Florida’s top election official in late January after his first appointee resigned after less than a month in office. Prior to her appointmen­t, Lee served as a judge for Florida’s 13th Judicial Circuit.

I don’t doubt that she is capable, but it’s also fair to point out that she had no prior election administra­tion experience and has been in the position for a very short time — roughly six months.

Florida has been in the spotlight nationally for our extremely close elections and recounts. I was in the Florida House in 2000 when the presidenti­al election between Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore was too close to call in Florida. Bush ended up winning the state by a mere 537 votes.

It’s also important to point out that current Sen. Rick Scott was elected governor twice in 2010 and 2014 in extremely close elections, winning both by pluralitie­s — not majorities — with 48.9 and 48.1% of the vote.

In 2018, DeSantis was declared the winner of the governor’s race by fourtenths of 1% of the vote, beating Andrew Gillum 49.6 to 49.2 — also a plurality.

And in an even closer race, Scott was named winner of the U.S. Senate seat after a recount that showed him beating incumbent Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson by thirteen-hundredths of 1% of the vote — only 50.06 to 49.93%.

Almost immediatel­y after the election results were certified, Scott, the outgoing governor, removed the duly-elected Broward County Elections Supervisor Brenda Snipes and put his go-to guy, Peter Antonacci, who had no election administra­tion experience, in charge of one of the largest elections offices in the state.

These close races illustrate why Florida has to make certain that our elections are shown to be accurate. Slight variations can affect the outcome.

Perhaps Secretary of State Lee responded so forcefully because other recent activity has come to light that could further erode confidence. Former special counsel Robert Mueller recently testified before Congress that Russia and other foreign actors are actively interferin­g now in preparatio­n for our 2020 elections.

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray claimed Russians are absolutely intent on election interferen­ce.

A U.S. Senate Intelligen­ce Committee report finds that all 50 states were targeted by Russia in 2016 and were largely undetected by officials at the time.

The bipartisan Senate report also indicated that Florida officials struggled to manage their cybersecur­ity and failed to heed multiple warnings as Russian hackers attacked electoral systems throughout the state and successful­ly breached two counties in 2016.

Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell refused to take up a bipartisan election security bill.

While Secretary Lee tried to assure us, I still have questions.

Do any of the vendors have remote access to the voter data? Can they change anything such as name, address, party affiliatio­n or whether they requested an absentee ballot? Can they remove a voter from the rolls?

If intrusions weren’t detected in the past, how can we be assured they will be detected now?

Can a bad actor in a SOE’s office manipulate votes or voter data and go undetected?

Have all outdated systems been replaced? Was there enough money to adequately fund the needs of all 67 counties?

Do any of the vendors on the state’s certified list have foreign ties? Have any of them contribute­d to a political party or candidate that has decision-making authority in our voting systems?

Trust is a rare commodity in our government right now, while partisansh­ip is at an all-time high.

This is too important to ignore in Florida and nationally. Consider this an ongoing endeavor as I seek answers.

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