Lawsuit Claims Florida Voter ID Law Has Kept Thousands Of Legitimate Voters From Polls
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) _ A voter registration law wrongly barred thousands of Florida residents from taking part in the 2006 election and should be thrown out, the NAACP and others said in a federal lawsuit
Monday, September 17th 2007, 2:57 pm
By: News On 6
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) _ A voter registration law wrongly barred thousands of Florida residents from taking part in the 2006 election and should be thrown out, the NAACP and others said in a federal lawsuit filed Monday.
The law prevents voters from registering if their driver's license or Social Security information doesn't match what is on the registration form.
Opponents of the law say it, and similar requirements in a number of states, have caused myriad problems. Legitimate voters have been thwarted for having a maiden name on a driver's license instead of a married name, or because of database input errors that make one digit wrong in a birth date, opponents said.
The lawsuit claims more than 20,000 people had their voter registration slowed down or denied in 2006 because of difficulties in confirming registration data.
The process is also too subject to user error, the lawsuit said. For example, a registration application would be thrown out if a potential voter accidentally reverses a couple of digits in their 13-digit driver's license number, the suit said.
Secretary of State Kurt Browning, named as the defendant, was in a meeting and couldn't immediately be reached for comment, his spokesman said.
Plaintiffs in the suit filed in U.S. District Court include the Florida State Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Haitian-American Grassroots Coalition.
The lawsuit asks a judge to prevent the law from being enforced by the end of the year. Dec. 31 is the registration deadline for the 2008 presidential primary.
In 2006, a federal judge barred the state of Washington from enforcing a similar law. That state subsequently agreed to let people whose names do not perfectly match information in other government databases to register _ but election officials now flag their names and require additional information before their ballots are counted.
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