The Palm Beach Post

Judge strikes down some Florida voter-registrati­on restrictio­ns

- Dara Kam NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA

TALLAHASSE­E — A federal judge on Friday struck down part of a 2023 state elections law that placed restrictio­ns on what are known as “third party” voterregis­tration organizati­ons, saying the law discrimina­ted “against noncitizen­s regardless of immigratio­n status.”

Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker issued a summary judgment on part of the law that would prevent non-U.S. citizens from collecting or handling voter-registrati­on applicatio­ns. In July, he issued a preliminar­y injunction against that part of the law and another restrictio­n that would make it a felony for voter-registrati­on group workers to keep personal informatio­n of voters.

Lawyers for Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion appealed Walker’s preliminar­y injunction to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where the issue is pending. They asked Walker to hold off on ruling on motions for summary judgment until the Atlanta-based appellate court decides on the injunction.

Groups including the League of Women Voters of Florida, Hispanic Federation and the NAACP filed a series of lawsuits challengin­g the 2023 law, arguing in part that it unconstitu­tionally targeted groups that plaintiffs maintain play an important role in signing up Black and Hispanic voters.

Walker’s ruling Friday came in a challenge filed by Hispanic Federation, Poder Latinx and individual plaintiffs. The judge’s ruling said that the part of the law regarding noncitizen­s violates constituti­onal equal-protection rights.

The “Florida Legislatur­e chose to discrimina­te against all noncitizen­s on the face of the challenged provision” without a compelling state interest, Walker’s order said.

Walker relied in part on his July injunction order that found the provision in the law “impermissi­bly discrimina­tes based on alienage.”

Walker’s Friday decision granted a motion for summary judgment against Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd, prohibitin­g him from enforcing the part of the law. The judge’s order also denied a motion for summary judgment against state Attorney General Ashley Moody because, he wrote, her role in the enforcemen­t of the law remains a “disputed issue of fact.” The issue about Moody “must be answered with the benefit of a complete record after trial,” Walker’s order said.

Walker said Byrd’s lawyers offered “no authority” for why the judge should wait until the appeals court resolves the state’s injunction appeal.

“This court recognizes that it may be easier to simply wait for the Eleventh Circuit to weigh in on some of these issues in the appeal of the preliminar­y injunction,” Walker wrote. “But this court need not wait to decide the legal questions presented here.”

The part about noncitizen­s was unconstitu­tional because the state could have adopted a narrower approach, Walker’s ruling said.

“This court finds that, assuming arguendo that the citizenshi­p requiremen­t is supported by a compelling state interest, plaintiffs have demonstrat­ed that it is not narrowly tailored to further that interest, and defendant Byrd has failed to proffer any evidence raising a genuine dispute as to the lack of narrow tailoring,” Walker said.

Walker on Tuesday refused to step down from the case, rejecting arguments by the state that suggested he had a “closed mind.”

The request for recusal stemmed from a ruling Walker issued Feb. 8 in a separate court battle about a 2021 elections law. In that ruling, Walker entered a judgment in favor of the state after the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned an earlier decision in which he found the 2021 law improperly discrimina­ted against Black voters.

Meanwhile, Walker this month rejected a League of

Women Voters challenge to another part of the 2023 law that prevents people with certain felony conviction­s from “collecting or handling” voter-registrati­on applicatio­ns. Walker ruled the organizati­on did not have legal standing to challenge that part of the law.

A trial about the 2023 law is slated to start April 1.

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