Two Thirds of Provisional Ballots in Florida Rejected
Thursday, January 6, 2005 at 07:06PM
TheSpook
They're better odds than Lotto. Still, if you were one of 27,451
Florida voters forced to cast a provisional ballot in the 2004
election, chances are your vote didn't count. Two-thirds of all
provisional ballots submitted in the general election were rejected,
according to aTallahassee Democrat analysis of reports provided by the
state's 67 county supervisors of elections. Most ballots were thrown
out because the voter was not registered in that county. More than 11
percent of the ballots were tossed aside because the voter was in the
wrong precinct. Another 7.2 percent were cast out because the voter had
been purged from the voting rolls, because either the voter hadn't
voted lately or was deemed a felon. Most counties did not separate
those two categories, but for the 20 counties that did, purged felons
accounted for 4 percent and inactive voters accounted for 7.3 percent.
State law requires county supervisors to purge voters from the rolls if
they haven't voted in the last two federal elections. The state
Division of Elections required states to purge felons who hadn't gotten
their civil rights back, but it didn't require them to use a statewide
felon purge list. That list was withdrawn after the media discovered it
was fraught with errors and didn't include Hispanic felons because of
discrepancies in how law-enforcement agencies tabulate data.
Provisional ballots were required for the first time nationwide in the
2004 election as a way to give elections officials more time to verify
ballots of voters whose eligibility was in question. It would be
expected that most voters who don't show up on the voting rolls would
be ineligible to vote. Florida was one of 28 states that required
voters to be in their proper precinct for their provisional ballot to
count. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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