The Guardian (USA)

Ron DeSantis signs bill to create Florida voter-fraud police force

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Florida governor Ron DeSantis signed a bill Monday to create a police force dedicated to pursuing voter fraud and other election crimes, embracing a top priority of Republican­s after Donald Trump’s false claims that his reelection was stolen.

DeSantis, who is running for reelection and considered a potential 2024 Republican presidenti­al candidate, made voting legislatio­n a focus this year, pushing the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to create the policing unit in a speech where he referenced unspecifie­d cases of voter fraud, which have become popular talking points in his party.

Voter fraud is rare, typically occurs in isolated instances and is generally detected. An Associated Press investigat­ion of the 2020 presidenti­al election found fewer than 475 potential cases of voter fraud out of 25.5 million ballots cast in the six states where Trump and his allies disputed his loss to President Joe Biden.

Republican­s nationwide have stressed the need to restore public confidence in elections and have passed several voting laws in the past two years aimed at placing new rules around mail and early voting methods that were popular in 2020 as the coronaviru­s pandemic disrupted in-person voting.

Florida’s new law, which critics have deemed as politicall­y motivated and unnecessar­y, comes after DeSantis praised the state’s 2020 election as smooth but later suggested more rules were needed.

The law creates an Office of Election

Crimes and Security under the Florida Department of State to review fraud allegation­s and conduct preliminar­y investigat­ions. DeSantis is required to appoint a group of special officers from the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t who would be tasked with pursuing the election law violations.

Existing state law allowed the governor to appoint officers to investigat­e violations of election law but did not require him to do so.

The law also increases penalties for the collection of completed ballots by a third party, often referred to as ballot harvesting, to a felony. It raises fines for certain election law violations and requires that election supervisor­s perform voter list maintenanc­e on a more frequent basis.

Democrats, the minority party in the state legislatur­e, have criticized the bill as a way for DeSantis to appeal to Republican voters who believe the 2020 election results were fraudulent while he flirts with a presidenti­al run of his own.

Late last month, a federal judge struck down portions of a sweeping election law passed last year in a blistering ruling that alleged the state’s Republican-dominated government was suppressin­g Black voters, and ordered that attempts to write similar new laws in the next decade must have court approval.

US district judge Mark Walker overturned a provision of last year’s law limiting when people could use a drop box to submit their ballot, along with a section prohibitin­g anyone from engaging with people waiting to vote. He also blocked a section that placed new rules on groups that register voters, including one requiring that people working to register voters submit their names and permanent addresses to the state.

The DeSantis administra­tion is working to reverse Walker’s ruling.

 ?? Photograph: John Raoux/AP ?? DeSantis praised the state’s 2020 election as smooth but later suggested more rules were needed.
Photograph: John Raoux/AP DeSantis praised the state’s 2020 election as smooth but later suggested more rules were needed.

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