by Chris McGreal
Florida's Governor Rick Scott (R) |
Justice department warns
that the practice of removing voters is illegal under federal law as Democrats
call it discrimination.
The justice department has
warned that the practice, which critics describe as "voter
suppression" by Florida 's
Republican administration aimed at stripping the ballot from people more likely
to support Democrats, is illegal under federal laws.
It has given the state until
Wednesday to agree to halt the purge, something officials in Florida say they have no intention of doing.
Federal authorities say that
the state is obliged to get justice department approval for changes to its
voting laws under the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which was introduced to end
practices that prevented African Americans from exercising their democratic right
in many southern states.
But Chris Cate, a spokesman
for the Florida
secretary of state, said the purge will continue.
"We have a year-round
obligation to make sure the voter rolls are accurate. We are going to continue
forward and do everything that we can legally do to make sure that ineligible
voters cannot vote," he said.
The justice department move
comes after the attorney general, Eric Holder, last week warned thatgains of the civil rights struggle hang in the balance in
the face of a determined effort by many states to roll back laws ensuring the
right to vote.
He said that there is a
"growing need to protect the voting rights of every eligible citizen"
amid a flurry of legislation and executive orders in US states ostensibly to
prevent election fraud with measures such as requiring proof of identity in
order to vote.
Although the numbers in Florida are relatively
small they could prove important in November's presidential election. Barack
Obama probably has to win the state if he is to hold on to office.
In 2000, George W Bush won
the White House after taking Florida
by a majority of just 537 votes leading to a bitter fight that went all the way
to the Supreme Court amid accusations that the state authorities had weighted
the system against his Democratic rival, Al Gore.
This year Florida has notified more than 2,600
registered voters that they may not be entitled to be on the electoral roll.
The Miami Herald reported that in Miami-Dade
County so far 385 people
who were removed from the roll have been shown to be citizens while just 10
have not.
Those tasked with purging
the rolls compares voter lists with driving licence files, which record
citizenship. But critics say that system is flawed in part because many people
obtain citizenship after applying for a driving licence.
Among those wrongly removed
from the voter roll was Bill Internicola who was born in New
York 91 years ago and earned a medal in the Battle of the Bulge during the second world
war.
A Florida member of Congress, Alcee Hastings,
described the state's purge of the electoral roll as "voter
suppression".
The lone Democratic party
senator in Florida ,
Bill Nelson, wrote to Scott saying that the move will be seen as an attempt to
discourage ethnic minorities and the young from voting. Polls show they are
more likely to support Democrats.
"Attempts to purge the
voter roll so soon after signing one of the nation's most controversial voting
laws raises concern, especially among young and minority voters," he said.
The Democratic party
chairman in Florida 's
Broward county, Mitch Ceasar, acknowledged that the numbers of people affected
are relatively small but said the purge of the voters roll is part of a broader
assault in Republican-controlled states on voting rights.
"It's not by accident
that Florida is doing this and all these other
states that have Republican governors are doing it," he told the Miami Herald. "The odds are too high that
they had the same independent thought of each other."
Last week, a federal judge
struck down another part of Florida 's
recent election law which critics said was aimed at deterring voter registration groups from
signing up electors.
The judge called the law
"harsh and impractical" for requiring the groups to turn in
registration forms within 48 hours of their completion or face large fines. The
deadline was almost impossible to meet if the forms were sent in the post, as
is common.
The League of Women Voters,
one of the groups which took legal action over the law, said that the
requirements had forced it to halt voter registration drives in Florida after 72 years.
In an editorial on Sunday,
the Miami Herald called for an end to the purge of the voter roll, saying it
was undemocratic.
It said that the Republicans
claim to be preventing a problem that there is no evidence exists.
"It carries the stench
of voter suppression in a presidential election year when Florida is among a handful of swing states
key to victory for either President Obama or his Republican opponent, former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney," it said.
"Florida seems to be heading back to those
"Flori-duh" days of purging voters who have every right to vote and
finding ways to limit young people, immigrants and minorities - who typically
lean Democrat - from voting with onerous rules on voter-registration drives."
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