Former Florida Governor, Charlie Crist. (photo: Getty Images)
Former GOP Leaders
Admit to Voter Suppression
27 November 12
new Florida law that contributed to long voter lines and caused some to abandon voting altogether was intentionally designed by Florida GOP staff and consultants to inhibit Democratic voters, former GOP officials and current GOP consultants have told The Palm Beach Post.
Republican leaders said in proposing the law that it
was meant to save money and fight voter fraud. But a former GOP chairman
and former Gov. Charlie Crist, both of whom have been ousted from the
party, now say that fraud concerns were advanced only as subterfuge for
the law's main purpose: GOP victory.
Former Republican Party of Florida Chairman Jim Greer
says he attended various meetings, beginning in 2009, at which party
staffers and consultants pushed for reductions in early voting days and
hours.
"The Republican Party, the strategists, the
consultants, they firmly believe that early voting is bad for Republican
Party candidates," Greer told The Post. "It's done for one reason and
one reason only. … 'We've got to cut down on early voting because early
voting is not good for us,' " Greer said he was told by those staffers
and consultants.
"They never came in to see me and tell me we had a (voter) fraud issue," Greer said. "It's all a marketing ploy."
Greer is now under indictment, accused of stealing
$200,000 from the party through a phony campaign fundraising operation.
He, in turn, has sued the party, saying GOP leaders knew what he was
doing and voiced no objection.
"Jim Greer has been accused of criminal acts against
this organization and anything he says has to be considered in that
light," says Brian Burgess, Florida GOP spokesman since September.
But Greer's statements about the motivations for the
party's legislative efforts, implemented by a GOP-majority House and
Senate in Tallahassee in 2011, are backed by Crist - also now on the
outs with the party - and two veteran GOP campaign consultants.
Wayne Bertsch, who handles local and legislative races for Republicans, said he knew targeting Democrats was the goal.
"In the races I was involved in in 2008, when we
started seeing the increase of turnout and the turnout operations that
the Democrats were doing in early voting, it certainly sent a chill down
our spines. And in 2008, it didn't have the impact that we were afraid
of. It got close, but it wasn't the impact that they had this election
cycle," Bertsch said, referring to the fact that Democrats picked up
seven legislative seats in Florida in 2012 despite the early voting
limitations.
Another GOP consultant, who did not want to be named,
also confirmed that influential consultants to the Republican Party of
Florida were intent on beating back Democratic turnout in early voting
after 2008.
In 2008 Democrats, especially African-Americans,
turned out in unprecedented numbers for President Barack Obama, many of
them casting ballots during 14 early voting days. In Palm Beach County,
61.2 percent of all early voting ballots were cast by Democrats that
year, compared with 18.7 percent by Republicans.
In 2011 Republicans, who had super majorities in both
chambers of the legislature, passed HB 1355, which curtailed early
voting days from 14 to eight; greatly proscribed the activities of voter
registration organizations like the League of Women Voters; and made it
harder for voters who had changed counties since the last election to
cast ballots, a move that affected minorities proportionately more than
whites. The League and others challenged the law in court, and a federal
judge threw out most of the provisions related to voter registration
organizations.
Various voter registration organizations, minority
coalitions and Democratic office holders are now demanding
investigations either by state or federal officials.
On Oct. 26, The Post published a story citing a deposition by Florida GOP General Counsel Emmett "Bucky" Mitchell IV in litigation between Florida and the U.S. Justice Department over HB 1355. Mitchell described a meeting near New Year's Day 2011, in which he was approached by GOP staffers and consultants to write the bill that would become HB 1355.
He said the meeting had followed other conversations with those same GOP officials and consultants since the fall of 2010.
Crist said he was asked
to curb early voting
Crist said party leaders approached him during his
2007-2011 gubernatorial term about changing early voting, in an effort
to suppress Democrat turnout. Crist is now at odds with the GOP, since
abandoning the party to run for U.S. Senate as an independent in 2010.
He is rumored to be planning another run for governor, as a Democrat.
Crist said in a telephone interview this month that he
did not recall conversations about early voting specifically targeting
black voters "but it looked to me like that was what was being
suggested. And I didn't want them to go there at all."
About inhibiting minority voters, Greer said:
"The sad thing about that is yes, there is prejudice
and racism in the party but the real prevailing thought is that they
don't think minorities will ever vote Republican," he said. "It's not
really a broad-based racist issue. It's simply that the Republican Party
gave up a long time ago ever believing that anything they did would get
minorities to vote for them."
But a GOP consultant who asked to remain anonymous out of fear of retribution said black voters were a concern.
"I know that the cutting out of the Sunday before
Election Day was one of their targets only because that's a big day when
the black churches organize themselves," he said.
GOP spokesman Burgess discounted Crist's statement to The Post.
"Charlie Crist speaks out of both sides of his mouth," he said.
Former Florida Secretary of State Kurt Browning, a
Republican, has spoken favorably about HB 1355, because he believes its
12-hour early voting days - the law previously limited them to eight
hours a day - give voters more flexibility to vote before or after work.
"But reducing early voting days does not attack voter
fraud and given the longer days, it certainly does not save money,"
Browning has said.
In a 2011 deposition in the litigation over HB 1355,
Browning said that while he was always concerned with voter fraud, he
did not see it as a large problem in the state and that was why he did
not include any mention of it in his legislative goals for 2011.
"It wasn't an issue that rose to the level to place it in our package," Browning said.
Greer told The Post that people who attended the GOP's behind-the-scenes meetings on early voting included: Andy Palmer, former state GOP executive director, now a Tallahassee political consultant; Bret Prater, head of party development; Randy Enwright of Enwright Consulting, a veteran Tallahassee political consultant; Jim Rimes, former state GOP executive director and now a consultant with Enwright; Kirk Pepper, a former top aide to House Speaker Dean Cannon; and Rich Heffley, a former top aide to Crist.
The Post contacted all of them. GOP spokesman Burgess
responded for Palmer and Prater and also for Frank Terraferma, director
of state House campaigns, who had been named in the Bucky Mitchell
deposition as attending the meeting about the drafting of 1355.
"If what Greer said had happened, that would be wrong
and he should have fired those men," Burgess said. "Why didn't he fire
them? They said they were never in any meeting with Jim Greer of that
kind. They never had meetings of that kind."
The other four did not respond.
Ex-House speaker:
Law meant to curb fraud
Cannon, who took over as House speaker in 2010, said
he had no conversations about early voting with GOP strategists and that
he believed HB 1355 was aimed at voter fraud.
"I don't recall anybody talking about some tactical
advantage or need to curtail early voting," said Cannon, who has
launched a lobbying business in Tallahassee since his term as a state
representative ended this month.
But Crist, who extended early voting hours in 2008 by
executive order to address long lines during that presidential election,
said he was approached about early voting but told the GOP consultants
and staffers that he would veto any proposed legislative changes that
would reduce early voting.
"The people that worked in Tallahassee felt that early
voting was bad, " Crist said. "And I heard about it after I signed the
executive order expanding it. I heard from Republicans around the state
who were bold enough to share it with me that, 'You just gave the
election to Barack Obama.'"
It wasn't until Gov. Rick Scott took office in January
2011 that the idea went anywhere. It passed the legislature that
session and Scott signed it into law.
"I assume they decided, 'It's 2011, Crist is gone,
let's give it a shot,'" Crist said. "And that's exactly what they did.
And it is exactly what it turned out to be."
Before signing the law, Scott said he wanted to make
voting easier and to eliminate voter fraud. Recently, he asked Secretary
of State Ken Detzner to look into problems with the November election
and to recommend changes if necessary.
Purging of non-citizens
off voter rolls discussed
Besides early voting, Greer said other issues
discussed at the behind-the-scenes meetings were voter registration
organizations, attempts to have Florida Supreme Court judges defeated at
the polls and the purging of voters on the rolls who might not be U.S.
citizens.
"There is absolutely nothing with their absolute
obsession with retaining power that they wouldn't do - changing the
election laws to reduce early voting, to keep organizations like the
League of Women Voters from registering people, going after the Supreme
Court justices," Greer said of his former colleagues.
HB 1355 greatly reduced the time voter registration
organizations had to hand in registration applications and imposed hefty
fines for any violation of the time guidelines, which forced the
largest voter registration organizations to suspend activities, afraid
they might incur fines they couldn't afford. The League of Women Voters
suspended its activities in Florida for the first time in nine decades.
A federal judge subsequently struck down those parts
of 1355 and registration organizations resumed their activities over the
summer of 2012.
The Division of Elections under Scott also issued
purge lists for non-citizen voters, which several county elections
supervisors have criticized as being filled with errors. The attempted
voter purge resulted in several lawsuits against Scott's administration,
and nearly all of the state's elections supervisors abandoned the
effort in the months leading up to the presidential election.
And the Republican Party of Florida waged a campaign
to defeat three Supreme Court justices this fall. Voters chose to retain
all three.
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