Q&A – How Florida Reconciles Voter Rolls And Determine Eligible Voters

Photo: Getty Images

Today’s entry: How does Florida protect itself from this type of fraud? How does Florida handle a new voter application that does not match a social security number?

Bottom Line: Today’s note comes on back of a story out of Arizona where the ongoing audit of voter records and state records from last year’s election cycle is nearing a conclusion. Alongside the audit is the state’s ongoing evaluation of voter rolls in the state. The most recent report from the state revealed a somewhat stunning 393,017 registered voters in Arizona didn’t have matching records with the Social Security Administration, meaning they’re likely all ineligible to vote under the law. Now, the first important dynamic to address in the context of potential voter fraud is if votes have actually been cast under invalid registrations. Voter fraud doesn’t occur unless that takes place. 

Ineligible registrations represent the potential for fraud but don’t necessarily mean it’s happened or is happening. That’s where a credible audit of voting records is important. Now notably, provable voter fraud has occurred in Arizona and has been successfully prosecuted 22 times over the past decade in the state. This includes a criminal conviction for voter fraud last year of Randy Allen Jumper who was found to have fraudulently used absentee ballots for duplicate voting. 

The Florida Division of Elections regularly reconciles Florida’s voter rolls. This includes monthly purging of ineligible voters which occurs at both county level, through Supervisors of Elections, and the state level. Purging happens for the following reasons, moving out of state, deceased, felony conviction, voter requests in writing to be removed, and inactive for two or more years and unresponsive to state requests to remain active.

This year alone 370,566 previously registered voters have been purged from Florida’s rolls through the reconciliation process. That’s a number that is fairly typical. That’s to say Florida’s long been among the most diligent in reconciling voter rolls to aid in preventing the opportunity for voter fraud through illegible registrations. And to that end, the state just recently added another tool to the toolkit for voter integrity. The ERIC system. 

The state joined ERIC or the Electronic Registration Information Center, created by the Pew Trust, for the purpose of helping reconcile voter rolls between states. This year marked the first the state was fully up and running with it for the purpose of comparing voter rolls in our state for duplicate registrations in other states. As for Florida, our process is among the most rigorous in the country and helps guard against what’s reflected in the Arizona story that prompted your concerns. 

Each day I feature a listener question sent by one of these methods. 

Email: brianmudd@iheartmedia.com

Parler & Twitter: @brianmuddradio 


View Full Site