Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Court asked to nullify ballot question about opening of primaries to all voters

- By Brendan Farrington

TALLAHASSE­E—Even as close to 2 million ballots have been cast, a lawsuit filed Tuesday asks the Florida Supreme Court to nullify a proposed constituti­onal amendment that would open primaries to all voters regardless of party affiliatio­n.

Incoming Republican House speaker Chris Sprowls and Democratic Sen. Janet Cruz expressed support for the lawsuit in a joint press conference, saying that the proposal would hurt minority representa­tion in government.

“This can do irreparabl­e damage to our political process. This is the political equivalent to a battle royal. Nobody understand­s who’s going to be left out, nobody understand­s the damage that is going to be done to the process and who’s going to be disenfranc­hised, which is why it shouldn’t go into the constituti­on,” Sprowls said.

The ballot question would style Florida elections similar to those in California.

In Florida, all candidates for the state Legislatur­e, Cabinet and governor would appear on the same primary ballot and then the top two candidates would move onto the general election. That could mean two

Democrats or two Republican­s face each other in the general election.

The group All Voters Vote gathered petitions to put the proposal on the ballot. It would need 60% approval to pass.

Supporters say the current system produces the most politicall­y extreme candidates in the general election because independen­t voters don’t haver a say in primary elections. Florida has more than 3.8 million voters who aren’t registered with either major party, or about 27% of Florida’s more than 14 million voters.

The Supreme Court approved the ballot language in December. Anne Corcoran, who is representi­ng voter Glenton Gilzean in the lawsuit, said it’s unusual to ask the court to reverse a previous opinion. But she said studies that have come out since the opinion find that minority representa­tion would be hurt if it passes.

In a written statement, All Voters Vote Chairman Glenn Burhans said those studies were “asham report based on flawed and misleading data.”

“This is a grotesque misuse of the courts for a political stunt; the claims have no merit,” Burhans said.

The lawsuit comes as Floridians have already cast 1.8 million ballots by mail. It asks that votes for and against the proposal not be counted.

“If passed this amendment will hurt minority representa­tion and lead to more mudslingin­g and political chaos,” Cruz said.

“Simplyput, this amendment is a real threat to true representa­tive democracy.”

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