Politics
Rick Scott Goes On-Air to Defend Voter List Review
Around the State
A day after the state and federal government announced they were suing each other over Florida’s attempt to clean up its voter lists, Gov. Rick Scott took the Sunshine State’s case to the nation’s electronic airwaves.
Scott spent Tuesday morning doing interviews on a Tampa TV station, cable giants Fox News and CNN, and on radio via America’s News Network and Bill Bennett’s “Morning in America.”
The primary topic was Florida taking the Obama administration to court on Monday to gain access to the Homeland Security database, and counter plans by the Department of Justice to go to court to demand Florida halt the search for non-U.S. citizens on the voter rolls.
“We’re trying to fix our voter rolls and they’re trying to stop us,” Scott said while on Fox News. “It doesn’t make sense.”
Scott also urged listeners to call their congressional representatives to pressure Homeland Security to make the database available to Florida.
“I would [ring] your congressmen, your U.S. senators, and say ‘What is going on here that you ... the federal government ... are preventing Florida from making sure the voter rolls are proper,” Scott said on Bennett’s “Morning in America.”
Interviewed by Christine Romans on CNN, Scott said, "Everywhere I go I tell people 'I want you to vote, it's an important part of being an American that you be part of the system and vote. But I don't want people who aren't entitled to vote to do it, and I don't think any citizen does."
Meanwhile, the state’s ongoing review of more than 180,000 potentially questionable voters is actually on hold because Florida’s 67 county supervisors of elections halted the effort to assist the state as the exchanges grew between Florida and the DOJ.
The state had already sent 2,600 names to county supervisors to further check for their citizenship status.
Scott said about 100 people have been found on the voter rolls that were noncitizens, of whom approximately 50 had voted in prior elections.
The state claims it has tried since September 2011 to get DHS's help in finding noncitizens among Florida’s registered voters.
The DOJ announced it would also head to court, declaring that the state is in violation of federal law for conducting the check of voter status within 90 days of an election.
A few questions were also offered on the state’s Stand Your Ground law, as the Florida Task Force on Citizen Safety and Protection is meeting today in the Central Florida community of Longwood.
Scott was focused on the need to get Homeland Security’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements program (SAVE) database, which Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner has repeatedly claimed will provide the state with a better means to check the legal status of voters.
“I want to make sure that Florida voters that have a right to vote, get to vote, and their (votes) are not diluted by non-U.S. citizens,” Scott told Fox & Friends.
“I’ve asked for the database, which we’re entitled to from Homeland Security to help us make sure that non-U.S. citizens are not on our voter rolls, and they haven’t given it to us for nine months and now they’re telling us we’re doing something wrong.”
The word he used for the lack of action by Homeland Security -- while appearing on Bennett’s “Morning in America” -- was “stonewalled.”
Scott also objected to the contention by DOJ Assistant U.S. Attorney General Thomas Perez who wrote that the SAVE database requires immigration-related identifiers and documentation, which the state hasn’t confirmed would be available.
“We know that individuals are voting in our state illegally, they’re non-U.S. citizens. We know the best database is the SAVE database,” Scott said while appearing on CNN’s morning news program "Starting Point." “We’ve asked for it for months from Homeland Security, we want to work with Homeland Security to get it. So we’ve done all the right things. We don’t have a choice but to sue to get the database we’re entitled to.”
The DOJ has claimed the state’s effort to remove voters may violate the 1965 Voting Rights Act -- requiring federal preclearance before undertaking any changes in Monroe, Hillsborough, Collier, Hardee and Hendry counties, which have past experience with minority-voting problems -- and that because of the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, time has run out for the review before the 2012 elections.
"In short, your claim that the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security have worked in concert to deny Florida access to the SAVE program is simply wrong," Perez wrote.
"By your own admission, Florida has been on notice for at least eight months that the SAVE program can verify naturalized and derived United States citizens only if Florida provided the appropriate numeric identifiers, and where necessary, the underlying documentation. But Florida has failed either to provide the necessary information to DHS or to confirm that the necessary information would be available for verification purposes under the SAVE program."
The state is currently using its Division of Highway driver’s license records, which Florida officials admit are not up to date on providing accurate citizenship status.
The state’s effort to clean the voter rolls also drew a lawsuit last week from the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida which aimed at stopping the state, and claimed Scott and Detzner were using “political spin” to hide the intent of removing voters.
“It’s not partisan,” Scott told Bennett. “I want everybody that has a right to vote in our state, go register to vote and participate in our election. But if you’re a non-U.S. citizen, don’t do it.”
Bennett asked if members of the Democratic Obama administration favored non-U.S. citizens voting because they would tend to vote Democratic.
“I hope not,” Scott replied, “I hope they take their job seriously like I do.”
Reach Jim Turner at jturner@sunshinestatenews.com or at (772) 215-9889.
Scott spent Tuesday morning doing interviews on a Tampa TV station, cable giants Fox News and CNN, and on radio via America’s News Network and Bill Bennett’s “Morning in America.”
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“We’re trying to fix our voter rolls and they’re trying to stop us,” Scott said while on Fox News. “It doesn’t make sense.”
Scott also urged listeners to call their congressional representatives to pressure Homeland Security to make the database available to Florida.
“I would [ring] your congressmen, your U.S. senators, and say ‘What is going on here that you ... the federal government ... are preventing Florida from making sure the voter rolls are proper,” Scott said on Bennett’s “Morning in America.”
Interviewed by Christine Romans on CNN, Scott said, "Everywhere I go I tell people 'I want you to vote, it's an important part of being an American that you be part of the system and vote. But I don't want people who aren't entitled to vote to do it, and I don't think any citizen does."
Meanwhile, the state’s ongoing review of more than 180,000 potentially questionable voters is actually on hold because Florida’s 67 county supervisors of elections halted the effort to assist the state as the exchanges grew between Florida and the DOJ.
The state had already sent 2,600 names to county supervisors to further check for their citizenship status.
Scott said about 100 people have been found on the voter rolls that were noncitizens, of whom approximately 50 had voted in prior elections.
The state claims it has tried since September 2011 to get DHS's help in finding noncitizens among Florida’s registered voters.
The DOJ announced it would also head to court, declaring that the state is in violation of federal law for conducting the check of voter status within 90 days of an election.
A few questions were also offered on the state’s Stand Your Ground law, as the Florida Task Force on Citizen Safety and Protection is meeting today in the Central Florida community of Longwood.
Scott was focused on the need to get Homeland Security’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements program (SAVE) database, which Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner has repeatedly claimed will provide the state with a better means to check the legal status of voters.
“I want to make sure that Florida voters that have a right to vote, get to vote, and their (votes) are not diluted by non-U.S. citizens,” Scott told Fox & Friends.
“I’ve asked for the database, which we’re entitled to from Homeland Security to help us make sure that non-U.S. citizens are not on our voter rolls, and they haven’t given it to us for nine months and now they’re telling us we’re doing something wrong.”
The word he used for the lack of action by Homeland Security -- while appearing on Bennett’s “Morning in America” -- was “stonewalled.”
Scott also objected to the contention by DOJ Assistant U.S. Attorney General Thomas Perez who wrote that the SAVE database requires immigration-related identifiers and documentation, which the state hasn’t confirmed would be available.
“We know that individuals are voting in our state illegally, they’re non-U.S. citizens. We know the best database is the SAVE database,” Scott said while appearing on CNN’s morning news program "Starting Point." “We’ve asked for it for months from Homeland Security, we want to work with Homeland Security to get it. So we’ve done all the right things. We don’t have a choice but to sue to get the database we’re entitled to.”
The DOJ has claimed the state’s effort to remove voters may violate the 1965 Voting Rights Act -- requiring federal preclearance before undertaking any changes in Monroe, Hillsborough, Collier, Hardee and Hendry counties, which have past experience with minority-voting problems -- and that because of the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, time has run out for the review before the 2012 elections.
"In short, your claim that the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security have worked in concert to deny Florida access to the SAVE program is simply wrong," Perez wrote.
"By your own admission, Florida has been on notice for at least eight months that the SAVE program can verify naturalized and derived United States citizens only if Florida provided the appropriate numeric identifiers, and where necessary, the underlying documentation. But Florida has failed either to provide the necessary information to DHS or to confirm that the necessary information would be available for verification purposes under the SAVE program."
The state is currently using its Division of Highway driver’s license records, which Florida officials admit are not up to date on providing accurate citizenship status.
The state’s effort to clean the voter rolls also drew a lawsuit last week from the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida which aimed at stopping the state, and claimed Scott and Detzner were using “political spin” to hide the intent of removing voters.
“It’s not partisan,” Scott told Bennett. “I want everybody that has a right to vote in our state, go register to vote and participate in our election. But if you’re a non-U.S. citizen, don’t do it.”
Bennett asked if members of the Democratic Obama administration favored non-U.S. citizens voting because they would tend to vote Democratic.
“I hope not,” Scott replied, “I hope they take their job seriously like I do.”
Reach Jim Turner at jturner@sunshinestatenews.com or at (772) 215-9889.

Comments (3)
If you get the illegals out of the state the problem would be solved, along with several others.
Idiot thief
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