Wednesday, April 15, 2009

How Florida Republicans plan to own Florida ... by gimleteye

Florida may lag in the bottom quintiles of performance, in a variety of social programs, but in terms of out-and-out politics there is no beating the Florida legislature.

The legislature may not get much done for the public (in fact the Florida legislature's primary purpose, session after session, is to build higher walls in Tallahassee around civic engagement and involvement in government processes, especially related to land use, development, water infrastructure, and zoning), but in respect to securing the power of a permanent majority there is is plenty of brainpower at work. The latest is emerging care of Miami-Dade's Senator Alex Diaz de la Portilla. He couldn't come up with this stuff himself, but not to worry: the Miami hothouse is filled with Jeb Bush Republicans determined to control the party once Charlie Crist rides off to a Senate campaign. (See, Marco Rubio.)

Here is the story: Florida confounded the myth of a red state majority by electing Barack Obama by a slim, surprising margin. Among political insiders, the Republican loss attracted considerable attention. An even more significant trend than the Obama victory in Florida: the outsized margin to the favor of Democrats from new voter registrations.

Republicans own a comfortable majority in both houses of the legislature by virtue of gerrymandered districts, out of proportion with demographic changes and state-wide voting trends. They will do anything to protect the rules of the game.

The following news of new legislation comes via writer Gary Fineout's blog.. (please click, 'read more')

From - The Fine Print

April 15, 2009

Senate elections bill would shake up parties and 2010 races

With less than three weeks left in the session, the Senate is about to unveil a major elections measure that could greatly reshape the 2010 elections, as well as change the role of the two political parties.

The Senate Ethics and Elections Committee on Thursday will consider SB 956 - a so-called "shell bill" sponsored by Sen. J.D Alexander. Sen. Alex Diaz de la Portilla has come up with a 72-page amendment that covers everything from the purging of voter names from the rolls, voter registration, interviewing voters outside of polling places, allows for the recreation of leadership funds by the Senate President and House Speaker, and gives sitting lawmakers more control over the state party.

Some of the major changes include:

* Taking away the governor's ability to appoint 10 people to the state executive committee that picks the chairman of the party. Current Republican Party of Florida Chairman Jim Greer got his job initially with the help of that change. The new measure would instead increase the representation on the executive committee of sitting state legislators.

* Allows political committees formed in other states to work in Florida - without having to comply with any laws requiring registration or disclosure of finances.

* Allows potential candidates for office to do polls testing the waters without having to open a campaign account first. Political parties could also do polls on potential candidates and share the results.

* Expands the type of help that political parties can do on behalf of candidates, including spending unlimited amounts on "communications media."

* Gives the speaker, Senate president, minority and majority leaders the green-light to create leadership funds that were previously banned. (Although it can be argued that legislators can sidestep this prohibition by setting up their own committee of continuous existence.)

* Subject the executive director of the state Elections Commission to Senate confirmation. (Diaz de la Portilla had a long-running battle with the elections commission that he largely won. During that time, he accused the executive director of being biased against him.)

* Requires election supervisors to regularly get information from the U.S. Social Security Administration on whether people died and to purge the names of dead voters within 7 days.

* Gives the Secretary of State the right to call for recounts instead of waiting for the canvassing commission to order them.

* No one shall "solicit" information from voters standing in lines outside of polling places whether in person or by means of "audio or visual equipment."

* Creates a new section of law that says all election matters are "preempted to the state" unless set out by law.

* Would block potential voters from having their registration information verified on Election Day. All new applicants must have their registration validated before that day.

* Would change the law to say that if a "vacancy in nomination" for a race does not occur if that candidate did not properly qualify.

2 comments:

Delaware Job Hunters said...

This article reminds me of this quote, "Seasonal unemployment was found to be a state which does not have much employment, for example, rural areas."

But there are career experts who conduct seminars giving advice about the needed skills to compete in today's competitive job market.

Anonymous said...

From the League of Women Voters Florida:

Senator Diaz de la Portilla, a member of the Ethics & Elections Committee, filed a strike-all committee amendment on Tuesday that makes SB 956 the most anti-voter bill we have seen thus far. The new language is worse than the original, and much more is at stake. This bill threatens to undo all the gains made in voter registration and voter turn-out during the 2008 election! It will be heard in the E & E Committee on Thursday afternoon, April 16.

Places onerous and unnecessary burdens on third party voter registration efforts

Further limits acceptable IDs preventing citizens from registering to vote and registered voters from exercising their right to vote;

Forces more voters to vote by provisional ballots;

Places onerous and unnecessary burdens on petition-gathering activities.

It is imperative that League members contact the Senators on the Ethics & Election Committee as soon as possible and ask them to vote no on this dangerous bill.

Senator J.D. Alexander (Dist 17) (850) 487-5044; alexander.jd.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Carey Baker (Dist 20); (850) 487-5014; baker.carey.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Alex Diaz de la Portilla (Dist 36); (850) 487-5109; portilla.alex.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Mike Fasano (Dist 11); (850) 487-5062; fasano.mike.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Andy Gardiner (Dist 9); (850) 487-5047; gardiner.andy.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Arthenia L. Joyner (Dist 18); (850) 487-5059; joyner.arthenia.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Charlie Justice (Dist 16); (850) 487-5075; justice.charlie.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Nan H. Rich (Dist 34); (850) 487-5103; rich.nan.web@flsenate.gov
Senator Garrett Richter (Dist 37); (850) 487-5124; richter.garrett.web@flsenate.gov