Miami Herald

DeSantis taps conservati­ve state lawmaker Cord Byrd to oversee Florida’s elections

- BY LAWRENCE MOWER lmower@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday named conservati­ve Rep. Cord Byrd, a Neptune Beach Republican, as Florida’s new secretary of state, overseeing the state’s elections office.

Byrd, an attorney, has sponsored some of the most controvers­ial bills in the Legislatur­e in recent years, and he sided with DeSantis in an ongoing intra-party dispute over the state’s congressio­nal maps.

In a statement, DeSantis touted bills that Byrd has sponsored in recent years and were some of the governor’s top priorities, including 2019 legislatio­n banning socalled “sanctuary cities,” a 2020 bill requiring some employers to check the immigratio­n status of new workers and broad anti-rioting legislatio­n in 2021.

“Cord Byrd has been an ally of freedom and democracy in the Florida Legislatur­e, and I am confident he will carry that mission forward as Secretary of State,” DeSantis said. “I look forward to his successes ensuring Florida’s elections remain safe, secure and well-administer­ed.”

Byrd, 51, said in a statement that he will “make sure Florida continues to have secure elections and that we protect the freedom of our citizens in the face of big-tech censorship and ever-growing cybersecur­ity threats.”

The Friday announceme­nt came a day after Secretary of State Laurel Lee, a former federal prosecutor and Hillsborou­gh County judge, announced she was leaving the post on Monday. She’s widely believed to be running in Congressio­nal District 15 as a Republican.

Lee received bipartisan praise during her tenure as the state’s election

chief, advancing DeSantis’ controvers­ial election measures while staying out of the political fray. The 2020 election was one of the state’s smoothest in recent memory, and the president of the associatio­n representi­ng the state’s elections supervisor­s called her departure a “horrible loss.” Florida’s secretary of state earns a

salary of $170,000.

Since joining the Legislatur­e in 2016, Byrd has served on the House’s Public Integrity and Elections Committee. When a protest broke out in the House gallery during a floor debate over this year’s abortion bill, Byrd turned around and cursed at Black Democratic colleagues, considered a major breach of decorum.

Afterward, Rep. Angie Nixon, D-Jacksonvil­le, called Byrd a “racist” and called for his censure.

Byrd responded by calling her a “one-trick pony” who routinely calls her opponents white supremacis­ts, according to Florida Politics.

After Friday’s announceme­nt, Nixon released a statement calling the idea of Byrd overseeing the state’s elections “frightenin­g.”

“Florida’s top elections official should be a consensus builder whose sole focus is running free and fair elections for every citizen of our state,” she said. “Cord Byrd is not that person. He is unqualifie­d in both his credential­s and his temperamen­t.”

In March, DeSantis appointed Byrd’s wife, Esther, to the State Board of Education despite her making headlines due to a tweet about the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

The tweet, which was taken down, said, “In the coming civil wars (We the People vs the Radical Left and We the People cleaning up the Republican Party), team rosters are being filled. Every elected official in DC will pick one. There are only 2 teams … With Us [or] Against Us,” according to News 4 Jacksonvil­le.

Byrd called his wife’s tweet “hyperbole” and compared it to comments made by TV personalit­ies on Fox News.

Byrd still faces confirmati­on by the Florida Senate.

In his new role, Byrd will be overseeing a Department of State that is newly enhanced with a first-of-its-kind elections police force, an idea that DeSantis pushed this year to combat election-related fraud.

The legislatio­n created a 15-person Office of Election Crimes and Security to investigat­e fraud complaints, supplement­ed by 10 police officers chosen by the governor from the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t.

 ?? Florida House of Representa­tives ?? State Rep. Cord Byrd, R-Neptune Beach
Florida House of Representa­tives State Rep. Cord Byrd, R-Neptune Beach

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