The Arizona Republic

Florida voting bill awaits governor’s signature

Fraud given as reason to tighten voting by mail

- Bobby Caina Calvan and Brendan Farrington

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. – Florida Republican­s passed a series of sweeping voter restrictio­ns Thursday targeting mailed ballots, drop boxes and other popular election methods, becoming the latest GOP-controlled state to tighten voting rules after massive turnout in 2020.

The bill now heads to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, who just months ago touted the efficiency and security of the presidenti­al election in one of the nation’s most politicall­y important states. He was expected to sign it.

Republican­s said the legislatio­n, passed on a party-line vote, was needed to guard against fraud, after former President Donald Trump made unfounded claims that the presidenti­al election was stolen from him. Democrats said the move is a partisan attempt to keep some voters from the ballot box.

Much of the debate focused on voteby-mail ballots and how they are collected and returned.

If the bill is signed into the law, drop boxes would only be available when early voting sites are open. In some counties, voters could use the drop boxes at any time of the day to submit their completed ballots.

Additional­ly, those drop boxes would have to be supervised by elections officials.

Another focus is on voting by mail, including the use of drop boxes and socalled “ballot harvesting.” The latter is a practice Republican­s have long sought to limit because of their worry that outside groups could tamper with the completed ballots they collect.

The measure was far different from some of the more severe measures proposed initially, including an outright ban on ballot drop boxes and a requiremen­t to present identifica­tion when dropping off a ballot.

Still, Democrats had Georgia’s sweeping rewrite of its election rules on their minds in decrying the rule changes that remained, including a prohibitio­n against groups that distribute food and water to voters waiting to vote – although the prohibitio­n would not apply to election officials.

“We’ve never said that any nonprofit organizati­on was trying to influence folks,” said Rep. Blaise Ingoglia, a Republican who helped secure the Florida bill’s passage. “What we’re saying in the bill is that the intent of the no-solicitati­on zone in that language is to make sure that nobody is trying to influence the vote while they are in line.”

The Georgia bill has prompted alarm among Democrats and voting rights advocates in Florida and elsewhere, who object to new identifica­tion requiremen­ts that critics said would make once-routine changes to voter registrati­on informatio­n more inconvenie­nt.

“We had, as the Republican governor said, one of the best operated elections in the country, and yet today, the majority party through last minute maneuvers passed a voter suppressio­n bill mimicking what took place in Georgia,” said Democratic Rep. Anna Eskamani.

Last fall, in Florida, 680,000 more Democrats than Republican­s voted by mailed absentee ballots.

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