League News and Publicity
A New Election Lawsuit in Florida
The League of Women Voters claims a new state law will unlawfully
depress voter registration
By SIOBHAN MORRISEY/MIAMI
TIME Magazine, May. 18, 2006
The League of Women Voters has been signing up voters ever since
women won the right to vote in 1920. But now, for the first time
in the League's storied history, a branch of the organization
has shut down its operations to protest a new Florida law that
the League claims will have a chilling effect on voter registration
— in a state that already has one of the nation's most notoriously
dysfunctional election systems.
In a federal lawsuit filed in Miami on Thursday against the Florida
Secretary of State and Division of Elections, the League's Florida
branch acknowledged that it had recently ceased efforts to register
voters because of what it calls the law's draconian fines against
organizations (other than political parties) for submitting forms
late. The League of Women Voters of Florida joined several other
pubic interest and labor groups, including the Florida AFL-CIO,
in challenging the constitutionality of the law, which went into
effect Jan. 1. They are asking the U.S. District Court to immediately
suspend the fines — which the groups say could bankrupt
their voter registration budgets.
As the lawsuit puts it, "the challenged law imposes civil
fines of $250 for each voter registration application submitted
more than 10 days after it is collected, $500 for each application
submitted after any voter registration deadline, and $5,000 for
each application [that for whatever reason doesn't end up being]
submitted. Plaintiffs are strictly liable for these fines, even
if their inability to meet the statutory deadlines results from
events beyond their control, such as the destruction of applications
in a hurricane."
On March 19 the board of directors for LWV of Florida voted unanimously
to suspend voter registration rather than put its volunteers and
$80,000 annual budget at risk, says its president, Dianne Wheatley-Giliotti.
"I'm angry, okay?" Wheatley-Giliotti says. "This
hits at the core of our mission. We were founded to educate voters
and get them involved in the political process. I can't do my
job, really."
Florida is the only state that levies fines for submitting registration
applications late or not at all, says Wendy Weiser of the Brennan
Center for Justice at the NYU School of Law, who also represents
the plaintiffs. And the LWV of Florida claims the impact of the
fines could be devastating. "The League of Women Voters'
entire annual budget of $80,000 would be decimated if only sixteen
voter registration applications collected by its volunteers were
lost in a flood, or if its volunteers took 11 days to submit the
few hundred applications they often collect during one day's work,"
according to the lawsuit.
Contacted shortly after the filing in Miami, Susan Smith, spokeswoman
for the Florida Department of State in Tallahassee said the agency
had not yet seen the lawsuit and therefore could not comment.
Other voter registration advocates say they also fear that one
of the underlying political intents of the law — which was
passed by the Republican-majority Florida Legislature —
is to dilute and discourage Democratic voter registration, since
groups like the AFL-CIO are thought to register more working-class
and minority voters.
Sen. Bill Posey, a Rockledge Republican, argues that hurricanes
or other disasters are not the issue; by imposing the fine for
failing to submit a voter's application, he maintains, the law
discourages people or groups from destroying the registration
forms of people with differing political views. (Weiser points
out that Florida already had a law on the books to address that
problem.) And if a hurricane hits, any fine due to delay or destruction
can be appealed, he says. "If a hurricane blew a building
away, I can't imagine they're going to get somebody for that,"
Posey says. "I think common sense would prevail. If there
is a nuclear holocaust I think the last thing people are going
to be worried about is getting their registrations in on time."
State Rep. Ron Reagan (no relation to the former President),
a Sarasota Republican who sponsored the law, says political parties
are exempt from the law "because we rarely have a problem
with political parties. It didn't matter what side you were on.
We were not going to penalize them." But Weiser of the Brennan
Center calls that position "discriminatory. The League of
Women Voters and AFL-CIO have been forced to shut down their operations.
It's not only burdensome but discriminatory. That's problematic
— and unconstitutional."
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