Late
Thursday afternoon, November 8, 2018 current Republican Governor of Florida,
candidate for US Senate, and adult
space alien baby, Rick Scott filed a lawsuit
against Broward County Supervisor of Elections, Brenda
Snipes, alleging that she is engaging in acts of fraud on behalf of
the Democratic candidates in the election “completed” just two days prior. She
is doing this by somehow skewing the numbers such that they continue to run in
consistent proportions against Governor
Scott and all other Republican candidates.
The
fact that the numbers skew heavily against Republicans
in a county that routinely runs 70/30 in favor of any random
Democrat has them clutching their pearls and suffering from the
vapors.
Thursday’s
meeting of the county Canvassing Board convened for
the single purpose of reviewing and showing the results of the provisional
ballots. By Florida
Statute, such ballots are cast by anyone who appears at a voting
location, who is not then verifiable as registered in the database. They are
then given the chance to vote, with that vote immediately sealed for later
review in the event that it can be verified at the conclusion of the election.
The
meeting was held in a largish room about 50’ x 75’ along the left wall was a
series of windows, the
other side of which contained the vote counting machines, looking
like large office copiers with computer screens attached, being operated by
about a dozen or so election employees keeping them running constantly while
surrounded by hundreds and hundreds of office boxes, presumably containing
counted ballots, as smaller plastic document trays were wheeled in, all
containing reams of ballots which were fed into the machines. We were told that
these were late-arriving absentee/mail-in ballots, or possibly untabulated
early vote ballots as well. Everyone was surprised to see so much left to be
counted though some veterans of the Broward ballot wars seemed more disgusted
than surprised that such a spectacle was necessary.
The room was cordoned in half on one side with spectators, perhaps 20 representatives of the campaigns, mostly lawyers in suits, about the same number of media reps, not so nattily attired, a few elected officials, and a sprinkling of members of the general public. On the other side was the Canvassing Board, consisting of two county judges, supported by a couple county attorneys, some staff, and joined by Supervisor Snipes.
The room was cordoned in half on one side with spectators, perhaps 20 representatives of the campaigns, mostly lawyers in suits, about the same number of media reps, not so nattily attired, a few elected officials, and a sprinkling of members of the general public. On the other side was the Canvassing Board, consisting of two county judges, supported by a couple county attorneys, some staff, and joined by Supervisor Snipes.
Early
in the day a clarion call had gone out across the interwebs seeking volunteers
to assist in calling and locating people who had submitted provisional ballots.
These volunteers were needed so that those ballots could be “perfected” via
affidavit to bolster the chances of them getting calculated. The sense from
these messages was that if enough people chipped in, it would be enough to tilt
the balance of the election.
Nothing
could have been further from the truth. While no vote should be minimized or
made light of, the notion that provisional ballots would be the key to turning
the tables on a few typically close Florida statewide elections is utter
nonsense. And the notion that hordes of volunteers could help save the day,
similar nonsense.
As it
happened, the total number of provisional ballots returned to the Supervisor’s
office, in the second most populous county in the state, where 700,000 votes
were already counted, came to 661.
Of
those 661, 205 were immediately identified as erroneously categorized as
provisional and instead should have been counted as regular ballots and tabulated
as such. But what happened instead stands as a microcosm of everything wrong
with Broward, and ultimately, all of Florida’s two decades of torturous
elections.
At
first, it was announced that those ballots, being as good as any other properly
submitted voter ballot, was run through the machines and counted as was
appropriate. That announcement resulted in an uproar from one of the
representatives of the Rick Scott campaign, attorney William
R. Scherer of Fort Lauderdale firm Conrad & Scherer, LLP. With
grandiloquent gesticulations he insisted that Supervisor Snipes was breaking
the law by counting the ballots before they were examined by the Canvassing
Board. He wondered aloud how the Snipes could “unring the bell” now that the
ballots had been counted? The short but hesitantly offered answer was that it
couldn’t be unrung. The votes counted.
In
response, attorney for the Nelson
campaign, Todd
Falzone of Fort Lauderdale firm Kelley/Uustal explained that the
requirement that provisional ballots be examined by the Canvassing Board
doesn’t apply to ballots wrongfully put into a provisional ballot envelope. If
a poll worker makes a mistake in determining that someone must vote
provisionally rather than through the regular voting process, the simple remedy
is to run the ballot as correct at the earliest opportunity. There was no bell
needing to be unrung. Instead, what counsel for Rick
Scott was doing was nothing more than an effort to perform for the
cameras while casting a cloud over a result that at the very moment the
argument was taking place, was getting closer and closer as more late results
came in. In fact, it was just about that time that word began filtering through
the crowd that the threshold for the Senate race had been reached to trigger an
automatic handcount
of all tabulated votes. This Senate race had now become the closest in Florida
history. And rather than allow the process to play out, the Governor was doing
everything he could to grandstand and simply make up out of whole cloth,
insinuations that somehow fake ballots were being allowed to slip through in
enormous numbers, regardless of the reality that no such evidence exists to
suggest much less prove such allegations.
But the
argument appeared to have rattled Supervisor Snipes, who has had multiple
problems
with her election management
throughout her tenure. Snipes herself was originally appointed to the office in
2005 by then governor Jeb Bush following the
suspension and removal in disgrace of the previous county Supervisor of
Elections, Miriam Oliphant.
Whispers in the room also insinuated that part of the rancor held by Mr.
Scherer against Dr. Snipes came about because he was instrumental in Snipes’
appointment but is now deeply disappointed in her effectiveness at her job.
After a brief break, the Board reconvened and Dr. Snipes announced that the 205 ballots had NOT been tabulated but had been merely “set aside for now”. Total confusion followed as it was argued again that if they weren’t provisional in character then tabulating is appropriate, while if they were provisional, their envelopes should not have been opened outside of the supervision of the Canvassing Board. To do so would thoroughly invalidate the ballots altogether.
After a brief break, the Board reconvened and Dr. Snipes announced that the 205 ballots had NOT been tabulated but had been merely “set aside for now”. Total confusion followed as it was argued again that if they weren’t provisional in character then tabulating is appropriate, while if they were provisional, their envelopes should not have been opened outside of the supervision of the Canvassing Board. To do so would thoroughly invalidate the ballots altogether.
And
thus we get to the real problem in Broward County. Brenda Snipes is, by all
appearances and by her actions going back over a decade, incompetent in her
role as the caretaker of the voting rights of citizens of Broward County. In
addition to this relatively small problem of 205 votes, we had, still running
just to our left, the ongoing counting of votes which we didn’t know if they were
early votes, Election Day votes, mail-in votes, or some combination. She has
been completely incapable of providing the public any information on what
exactly is going on. She is required by law to do so. She is required by law to
have all these votes, except for provisionals and military/overseas votes,
fully counted within 30 minutes of the closing of the polls. Yet here we were
nearly 2 full days after the election ended and on the cusp of the closest
elections this side of Bush v Gore.
But this points up an even larger problem in the state. The Republicans focus all of their negative energy at Broward because it’s the second largest county by population in the state but is far and away the most reliably Democratic county in the state, ringing up totals that are routinely in range of a 70/30 split. At this writing the split is 68/32 favoring the Dems in both races. Regardless of the focus on Broward, it is NOT the only county still counting votes. Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and Duval (Jacksonville) are running ballots as well.
But this points up an even larger problem in the state. The Republicans focus all of their negative energy at Broward because it’s the second largest county by population in the state but is far and away the most reliably Democratic county in the state, ringing up totals that are routinely in range of a 70/30 split. At this writing the split is 68/32 favoring the Dems in both races. Regardless of the focus on Broward, it is NOT the only county still counting votes. Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and Duval (Jacksonville) are running ballots as well.
If all
of the most populous counties are struggling to get their votes counted, this
speaks to a more systemic problem. It suggests that someone may be asleep at
the wheel at the Florida Secretary of State’s office. It is from there that
resources and oversight come. And in the same sense that every county knows
well in advance when an election is scheduled and should be prepared
accordingly, the Secretary of State should be sure that the big counties have
what they need in equipment and staffing to get the job done, and the oversight
to assure it’s getting done. Clearly neither are taking place. So as the
competency of Brenda Snipes can be called into question, the attention to all
citizens’ voting rights should be called into question with Secretary
of State Ken Detzner, a two term appointee of, yes, Governor
Rick Scott.
The
irony is that again, while all of this was taking place, Scott filed a lawsuit
against Brenda Snipes that accuses her of fraud in all but name. The suit states
that the failure on her part to produce records of votes tabulated and not yet
tabulated is causing “irreparable public injury”. The complaint does not say
what this injury is, nor does it make any mention of other counties and their
similar efforts to produce information or explain why they too have yet to
finalize their counts. And it also asks for no remedy beyond any “relief as the
Court deems appropriate.”
In
other words, really there’s no harm in counting the votes no matter how long it
takes. But on the off chance they can get a judge to stop the process, thereby
ending any chances that the results as announced could be overturned by actual
numbers of votes, the Scott (and by extension DeSantis) campaign will be more
than happy to accept it.
Ultimately
we are witnessing a Republican attempt to avoid counting all the legitimate
votes cast. Rather than acknowledging a concern that maybe they lost fair and
square, they prefer to blame the Republican appointed Supervisor of a
Democratic county while conveniently ignoring the fact that other Democratic
counties are having the exact same problem in a state run almost entirely by
gerrymandered-in-place Republicans.
Despite
it all, despite the mismanagement and faux outrage, once again, a Florida election
heads to a recount. But no worries, in Florida
there is plenty of incompetence and corruption to go around for everyone.
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