Fla. Gov. Rick Scott Defends Noncitizen Voter Purges

Democratic critics say Florida's Republican Gov. Rick Scott is purging eligible voters to give his party an Election Day advantage. Scott denied the accusation in an interview with NPR's Michel Martin on <em>Tell Me More</em>. Florida has been one of the states most active in making controversial changes to its election laws and procedures, as officials say the measures are aimed at preventing voter fraud.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott is defending his effort to prevent non-U.S. citizens from voting in his state after the Justice Department on Tuesday filed a lawsuit to stop him.

Scott told NPR's Michel Martin on Tell Me More Wednesday that after learning his state didn't verify the citizenship status of registered voters, he's trying to ensure that the ballots of U.S. citizens aren't diminished:

"What we've found is non-citizens voting, non-citizens registered to vote. I cannot sit here, as governor of this state, and not enforce our law. It's a crime and dilutes the right of U.S. citizens to vote."

Florida has received criticism for its process for identifying potential noncitizens, and local elections officials and others have found the results to be flawed.

The state has sought to verify the status of about 2,700 registered voters. So far, more than 500 of them have been identified as actual citizens. More than 140 have been identified as noncitizens and about 50 may have unlawfully cast a ballot.

A Miami Herald report found that the list of potential noncitizens "disproportionately" includes minorities: Nearly 60 percent of the people flagged are Latinos, who make up 13 percent of Florida's active registered voters.

Some critics say that Scott, a Republican, is purging eligible voters to give his party an advantage on Election Day. Scott denied the accusation in his interview with Martin.

Florida has been one of the states most active in making controversial changes to its election laws and procedures, as officials say the measures are aimed at preventing voter fraud.

A federal judge recently struck down portions of a Florida law that tightened rules for third-party groups that register voters. Florida also has been criticized for reversing rules that had made it easier for former felons to vote.

Since 2008, changes to state election laws have spread across the nation that restrict voter registration drives, scale back early voting periods or stop people from registering to vote on Election Day. All three practices had been credited with helping to increase the turnouts of young and minority voters who elected President Obama in 2008.

Given Obama's declined support among whites, according to polls, the participation of young and minority voters could be more critical to his reelection bid than in 2008.

The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University, which represented plaintiffs in the lawsuit over Florida's voter registration changes, found that such election laws have passed primarily in presidential battleground states.

The Justice Department has taken action to stop several such laws from being enacted, arguing that they could disproportionately prevent minorities from voting.

On Tuesday, Attorney General Eric Holder told a Senate committee:

"The question I think we have to ask ourselves, on both sides of the aisle, is 'Do we want to be the first generation to restrict the ability of American citizens to vote?' We have a bad history in that regard."

The Justice Department's lawsuit against Florida calls on the state to halt its effort because U.S. law bans changes within 90 days of a federal election. In a letter sent to the state, the Justice Department also argues that the state process violates federal laws that govern voter purges and ban non-citizens from voting. The Justice Department says the state also may be violating 1965 Voting Rights Act, which protects minorities.

"Because the State has indicated its unwillingness to comply with these requirements, I have authorized the initiation of an enforcement action against Florida in federal court," said Thomas Perez, assistant attorney general for civil rights.

Florida matched voter registration data against driver's license records and initially identified as many as 182,000 registered voters who may not be citizens. A more refined the search produced a second list of nearly 25,000 people before the state further narrowed the field to roughly 2,700.

To verify the findings, the state has sought access to a federal immigration database. But the Department of Homeland Security has refused the request.

Florida officials complain that Homeland Security is obstructing their effort. The state filed its own lawsuit on Monday demanding access to the immigration database.

"The statute says that the state has a right to use that database for voter registration. That's the law," Scott told Tell Me More. "We'll make sure that we do it the right way. Not one U.S. citizen has been eliminated from the voter rolls. Not one."

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