Baltimore Sun

Fla. elections official in eye of vote storm

GOP aims harshest jabs at supervisor in Broward County

- By Curt Anderson The Washington Post contribute­d.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — At the center of Florida’s vote recount storm is an elections supervisor with a checkered past whose Democratic-dominated county has been the target of protests and accusation­s, including by President Donald Trump, that something fraudulent is afoot.

Lawyers for Republican Gov. Rick Scott, who is in a razor-thin Senate race with incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson, have claimed that Broward Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes committed fraud without presenting any evidence. Trump has echoed those claims on Twitter.

State monitors and the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t say there are no indication­s of fraud in the county’s vote.

Yet, Snipes, a Democrat, remains a target for the GOP, including former Gov. Jeb Bush, who appointed her to the post in 2003 when the previous supervisor was accused of malfeasanc­e and now says Snipes should be removed. Snipes has been re-elected since then, and is unapologet­ic about her record.

“I’ve worked here for about 15 years, and I have to say this (is) the first time that this office or I have been under such attacks,” Snipes told reporters Monday. “There have been issues that haven’t gone the way we wanted it. You can call it a mistake or you can call it whatever you want.”

On Tuesday, Snipes hinted to reporters that she might not run for re-election in 2020 — “It is time to move on,” she said — but quickly added that no final decision has been made.

“I’ll check with my family and they’ll tell me what I’m doing,” she said.

Since Snipes has been in office, there seems to be a long list of these mistakes.

Earlier this year, for example, a judge ruled she broke election law by destroying ballots in a 2016 congressio­nal primary race involving Democratic Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz without waiting the required 22 months. Also in 2016, a medical marijuana amendment didn’t appear on some Broward ballots, and again that year results from primary elections were posted on the office’s website before polls had closed.

A week after the 2012 election, about 1,000 uncounted ballots were dis- covered. And in 2004, about 58,000 mail-in ballots were not delivered, requiring workers to hurry to replace them.

Just last week, a judge found that Snipes had violated Florida open records laws by failing to quickly provide voting records to attorneys for Scott’s Senate campaign.

“This is not a case about counting votes. This is a simple case about access to informatio­n that the supervisor of elections was required to have and required to provide,” said Scott lawyer Jordan Zimmerman. “This is simply public informatio­n the public is entitled to.”

Snipes, 68, a native of Talladega, Ala., moved to Broward County in 1964 to begin what became a long career as an educator. She eventually rose to become an area director in the public school system, leading principals from 16 schools, according to the supervisor’s office website.

In 2003 Bush appointed her to the supervisor’s position after her predecesso­r, Miriam Oliphant, was removed from office because of numerous problems in the 2002 primary election.

On Monday, several proTrump Facebook pages and one Twitter account posted Snipes’ home address and phone number — a tactic Broward County Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes, from left, and election officials Betsy Benson and Deborah Carpenter-Toye sign off on a sealed bin of ballots on Monday. called doxing” that often is a step toward harassment of people in the public spotlight and is prohibited by Facebook, Twitter and most other online platforms.

Facebook confirmed Tuesday that it had removed personal informatio­n about Snipes after the incident was reported to the company. Twitter declined to comment. Two tweets from an account visible Tuesday morning were deleted by noon.

Elections experts, however, say it’s not unusual for contested or provisiona­l votes in “blue” Democratic counties like Broward to mainly support that party.

“It is no surprise that Democrats gain votes later in the counting process in part because big cities tend to contain lots of Democratic votes, and given their population, cities take much longer to count,” said Richard Hasen, law professor at the University of California-Irvine and author of books on election controvers­ies, in an article Monday in Slate.

On Tuesday, a Florida circuit judge did suspend some looming recount deadlines, but her ruling applies to Palm Beach County only and does not apply to the race between Nelson and Scott.

Leon County Judge Karen Gievers ruled that a machine recount in two other statewide elections, including the race for governor, can go beyond Thursday's deadline.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ??
WILFREDO LEE/AP

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