Purge of Latino Voter in Florida in Full Swing

Satchel

2,500+ Posts
Ive come to the inescapable conclusion that there will be events of violence across America on election day come November. It's not enough for the GOP in Florida that it has lessened the opportunity to early vote and, eliminated Super Sunday Voting ( an initiative of African American churches across the country), it must now purge American (mostly Democratic and Latino) citizens from the roll in Miami Dade. This will not end well for those seeking to restrict the rights of the targeted Floridians and others across the country:How Florida Governor Rick Scott Could Steal The Election For Mitt Romney

By Judd Legum on May 28, 2012 at 11:00 am

On Wednesday, November 7, Mitt Romney could wake up as the President-elect thanks to one man: Florida Governor Rick Scott. With little fanfare, Scott is undertaking an audacious plan to kick thousands of Floridians off the ballot just before this year’s elections. It’s a sloppy, chaotic and possibly illegal plan. But it just might work. Here’s how:

1. Scott has created a massive list of Floridians to purge from the voting rolls before the election. Late last year, Governor Scott ordered his Secretary of State, Kurt Browning, to “to identify and remove non-U.S. citizens from the voter rolls.” But Browning did not have access to reliable citizenship data. The state attempted to identify non-U.S. citizens by comparing the voting file with data from the state motor vehicle administration, but the motor vehicle data does not contain updated citizenship information. The process, which created a list of 182,000 people, was considered so flawed by Browning that he refused to release the data to county election officials. Browning resigned in February and Scott has pressed forward with the purge, starting with about 2600 voters.

2. The list of “ineligible” voters is riddled with errors and includes hundreds of eligible U.S. citizens. According to data obtained by ThinkProgress, in Miami-Dade county alone, 1638 people were flagged by the state as “non-citizens.” Already, 359 people on the list have provided the county with proof of citizenship and 26 people were identified as U.S. citizens directly by the county. The remaining 1200 have simply not responded to the letter informing them of their purported ineligibility. Similar problems have been identified in Polk County and Broward County.

3. Scott’s list is heavily targeted at Democratic and Hispanic voters. A study by the Miami Herald found that “Hispanic, Democratic and independent-minded voters are the most likely to be targeted in a state hunt to remove thousands of noncitizens from Florida’s voting rolls.” For example, Hispanics comprise 58 percent of the list but just 13 percent of eligible voters. Conversely, “Whites and Republicans are disproportionately the least-likely to face the threat of removal.”

4. Florida election officials have acknowledged that, as a result of Scott’s voter purge, eligible voters will be removed from the rolls. “It will happen,” Mary Cooney, a spokeswoman for the Broward County Supervisor of Elections, told ThinkProgress. On or about June 9, anyone who hasn’t responded to the ominous and legalistic letter informing them of their purported ineligibility will be removed from the rolls. Some eligible voters won’t have been able to respond by that time due to travel, work obligations, family obligations or confusion as to the purpose of the letter. Some will forget to open it. Others may have moved.

5. Florida will likely be a close contest in 2012 and purging eligible Democratic and Hispanic voters could tip the balance to Romney. In the latest Real Clear Politics average of polling in the state, Romney and Obama are separated by just 0.5 percent. Hundreds of eligible voters in Democratic strongholds, wrongfully purged from the rolls, could easily make the difference for Romney.

6. Winning Florida could clinch the election for Mitt Romney. Nationally, the race between Obama and Romney is within two points. It’s expected to be close all the way to election day and Florida’s 29 electorial votes would be the deciding factor in many plausable electorial scenarios.

Will history repeat itself in Florida this year? By one estimate, 7000 Florida voters were wrongfully removed from the voter rolls for the 2000 presidential election — 13 times George W. Bush’s margin of victory in that state after the U.S. Supreme Court halted the post-election recount.
 
I will read and seriously consider sensationalist piece from a ultra left wing blog when you read and consider a sensational transcript from the rush limbaugh show.

Geeesh, the "purge of the latino vote." Who is it agan that always gets accused of practicing the politics of fear?? Might want to gaze is a mirror now and then.

And by the way "thinkprogess" is the name of the blog this POS came from. Precious is the article underneath that cries that there is a "universal press blackout" on their rediculous florida piece. Its always a conspiracy, not the fact that no one is picking it up because it lacks even a shred of journalistic value.
 
You have me confused with somebody who gives a damn about what you choose to read.

Wingnut sites won't report on this because they're partners in this calumny.
 
Obama will not win Florida. Obama will not have massive support from the North East Jewish population this time. And when Rubio is made the VP candidate, a large percentage of Latinos in Florida will vote for Romney.
 
Suggesting that Rubio will move the needle appreciably for Mood Ring shows that you are not conversant with the issues important to Latino Floridians.
 
The Latino community in Florida is split. Some are adamantly against dictators while some have more leftist leanings. Further some are very conservative Catholics while others are less religious. Some can relate to other Latinos better than retarded old school white politicians. The point is that Latinos are not automatic Dem votes who Obama can count on on election day.
 
Why is the Governor of Florida disenfranchising the poor immigrants who may or may not have remembered to do some unimportant paperwork when they invaded this country?
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I keep coming back to a basic point we have discussed in previous threads - the objective of voting laws should be the following:All those legally entitled to vote, and only those legally entitled to vote, should get to vote.

Does anyone have a problem with this concept?

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In Reply To
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So we should let people that are inelegible to vote, vote?
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Not in Democratic precincts. If they have a regular name like Smith or Jones and live in the suburbs, don't bother 'em.
 
A US District Judge in Florida has rejected the demands of the Obama Justice Department to stop the purge of ineligible voters from Florida voter lists. Of course the question people should be asking themselves is why Obama really wanted to interfere with this to begin with.
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