Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Early voting ends with church-sponsored push

- By Brian Ballou

FORT LAUDERDALE — Nearly 300 voters pushed strollers, held placards and chanted as they walked Sunday afternoon from the New Hope Baptist Church to the AfricanAme­rican Research Library a mile See churches lead away to cast the “Souls to the ballots on the Polls” march final day of SunSentine­l early voting. .com/ For the early voting ends mostly black participan­ts, voting early was not only a way to encourage others in their community to cast their votes in the primary but also to fulfill their own civic duty.

“Voting is essential to impacting our community,” said Pricia Moisin, who for 13 years has been a member of the Abundant Slide Christian Center, one of several churches that organized the “Souls to the Polls” event.

“Sometimes we forget how important it is to have a diverse group of people in decision- and policy-making, our ancestors died for that right. When it comes to early voting, a lot of us don’t capitalize, and some of us do get discourage­d waiting in long lines on the last day.”

The church-based initiative was carried out across the country Sunday. On Northwest Sixth Street in Fort Lauderdale, the crowd was balanced between young and old, families and single adults.

Harold Simmons, a 73-year-old retired educator, ducked under a

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canopy when it started to rain halfway through the event. The parade of people slowed down for about five minutes.

“So many people have died for this, so it’s important to vote,” said Simmons, who has been a member of the New Mount Olive Baptist Church in Fort Lauderdale for 35 years.

“The church is the foundation, it is a place where we can voice our opinions and band together for good, and make a difference,” Simmons said.

At the end of the route, the parking lot had the atmosphere of a street fair, with barbecue tents and other refreshmen­ts and hundreds of peo- ple in brightly colored T-shirts handing out pamphlets on candidates.

Voting was brisk: 500 people voted Sunday at the library, according to Tonya Edwards, spokeswoma­n for the Broward Supervisor of Elections.

There were more than 43,000 early voters in Broward and more than 28,800 in Palm Beach County during the early voting period that ended Sunday. Broward elections officials received more than 70,500 vote-by-mail ballots as of Sunday night. Palm Beach County’s vote-bymail number was unavailabl­e Sunday night.

Statewide, more than 2.3 million people requested vote-by-mail ballots, and nearly 500,000 had cast ballots at early voting sites.

Several candidates for local municipal races shook hands with passers-by and introduced themselves outside the library. Among the candidates who participat­ed in the march to the polls were Sheriff Scott Israel and U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, DWeston, who both face primaries on Tuesday. U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, DWest Delray, was also there; he faces a general election in November.

Voting on Election Day runs from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Voters must go to their precincts to vote on Tuesday; vote-by-mail ballots must be returned to the Supervisor of Elections Office by 7 p.m.

 ?? JIM RASSOL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Joshua Houston, center, joined dozens who turned out for the march to the African-American Research Library on Sistrunk Boulevard for early voting.
JIM RASSOL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Joshua Houston, center, joined dozens who turned out for the march to the African-American Research Library on Sistrunk Boulevard for early voting.

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