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Florida's Contested 2018 Races Could Be A Warning Of What To Expect In November

Sun Sentinel

As the nation prepares for an election that President Trump is already suggesting that he will contest, a handful of Florida elections in 2018 serve as a forewarning of what we should expect.

The 2018 elections could serve as a dry run in what is broadly expected to be a drawn-out vote count, due to the exploding numbers of people who will be voting by mail due to the pandemic.

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Two years ago, Florida had five major statewide races. Among them were the divisive contests for governor, between Democrat Andrew Gillum and Republican Ron DeSantis, and for the U.S. Senate, between outgoing Governor Rick Scott and incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson.

As the election results started to come in it became clear that three of the statewide races were so close that they were headed for an automatic recount.

But then something odd started to happen before the recounts even began to take place.

In Broward County, the largest Democratic stronghold in the state, 100 percent of precincts had reported their election results. Yet the number of total votes kept climbing up and up.

It was unclear at the time where these votes were coming from. In the days after the election, the vote totals in Broward County kept climbing, and the Republican margins of victory in the races started to shrink. In one statewide race, for the Commissioner of Agriculture, Democrat Nikki Fried soon narrowly overtook Republican Matt Caldwell, who had already declared victory.

Republican protesters began swarming the Broward County elections office warehouse in Lauderhill, where the ballots were being counted. They started chanting “Stop the steal!” and claiming rampant fraud was taking place inside.

Meanwhile, Democrats showed up, calling for elections officials to continue the vote count.

Republican congressman Matt Gaetz, of northwest Florida, came to Broward County to participate in the actions.

“Rapunzel spun straw into gold. Here you're spinnin' tens of thousands of ballots out of thin air,” Gaetz told a fired-up crowd. “Out of nothing.”

In Tallahassee, then-Gov. Rick Scott lobbed accusations that “rampant fraud” was taking place in Broward County and in Palm Beach County, where aged machines were delaying the vote counts.

“I will not sit idly by while unethical liberals try to steal this election from the great people of Florida,” said Scott.

President Trump entered the melee. He strongly supported Scott and DeSantis in their campaigns.

“There's bad things going on in Broward County, really bad things. All of a sudden they're finding votes out of nowhere,” said the president. “Rick Scott, who won by — you know it was close but he won by a comfortable margin — every couple hours it goes down a little bit.”

Lawsuits were filed. Conspiracy theories were widespread. Fox News carried round-the-clock coverage at the Broward Supervisor of Elections office, giving viewers across the nation a play-by-play of what was happening.

In the end, Rick Scott and Ron DeSantis hung on to their narrow victories.

Looking back, the events felt like the very beginnings of the 2020 presidential election. Some of the first “Trump 2020” banners were seen at the protests.

Little did we know it at the time, but things would soon come full circle.

The very issue that led to the delayed ballot counting in Broward County in 2018, we later learned, was the same issue that threatens to delay ballot counting across the entire country in the 2020 election. It’s the same issue that President Trump is already signaling he will use to contest the results of the presidential election: The counting of vote-by-mail ballots after Election Day.

In a September presidential debate, President Trump was asked if he would ask his supporters to remain calm and not engage in “unrest” if there is a delay counting vote-by-mail ballots, which by nature take longer to count.

“I'm urging my supporters to go into the polls and watch very carefully. Because that's what has to happen. I am urging them to do it,” said Trump. "If I see tens of thousands of ballots being manipulated, I can't go along with that."

“This is not going to end well," said Trump.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden pushed back on Trump's statements.

"This is all about trying to dissuade people from voting because he's trying to scare people into thinking that it's not going to be legitimate," said Biden. "The fact is that there are going to be millions of people, because of COVID, that are going to be voting by mail-in ballots, like he does, by the way."

In 2018, the problem was that Broward County dropped the ball.

Residents had been mailing in their vote-by-mail ballots for weeks before Election Day, but the Supervisor of Elections office had not taken steps to count tens of thousands of those ballots until Election Day itself, according to an audit released this year.

The county could have started counting vote-by-mail ballots fifteen days before the election, per state law at the time.

The delay created a major backlog of vote-by-mail ballots to be counted, in addition to the 18,116 vote-by-mail ballots that were received on Election Day.

Effectively, it meant that 69,902 vote-by-mail ballots were only counted in the two days after polls closed, according to the audit.

The mystery votes were not fraudulent; they were simply counted later than they should have been counted. That in itself was not illegal, since the deadline for reporting the first unofficial vote tally is not until the Saturday after Election Day in Florida.

But the delay left room for conspiracy theories and wild allegations to fester.

Broward Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes was removed from office for “incompetence” during the last days of Rick Scott’s administration. Her handling of the 2018 election was the latest in a long string of mismanagement — she also missed the 2018 recount deadline for the state of Florida by mere seconds.

In the audit of the 2018 elections, that was released this year, the scope of Snipes’ troubles was laid bare. The Office of the Broward County Auditor found that the entire election in Broward County was “understaffed"; that half of the precincts recorded more ballots cast than there were voters on Election Day; that the delay in counting vote-by-mail ballots held up election results for the entire state; and that all of the issues left it so that even auditors could not “provide assurance” about the final vote counts reported by Broward County.

Republican Peter Antonacci was appointed by then-Gov. Scott to replace Snipes as the election supervisor for Broward County. Since coming into office he has changed protocols for counting vote-by-mail ballots and bought new equipment.

The primary election in August was one of the first big tests of Antonacci’s new management. Yet even that election was presented with some problems because of vote-by-mail ballots.

“We were assaulted yesterday by over 13,000 vote-by-mail ballots that came in on Election Day,” Antonacci told reporters the morning after the primary election. “That's the very thing that caused the meltdown in 2018.”

The Florida Legislature took some steps to avoid these kinds of situations after the troubled 2018 election. It changed the law to allow election offices to start counting mail-in-ballots up to 22 days before Election Day. The Legislature also made the deadline for requesting a vote-by-mail ballot earlier, to ten days before an election from six days before an election.

This was an effort to stop so many ballots from getting mailed in at the very last minute, and to discourage backlogs in counting vote-by-mail ballots.

Even so, on primary night, Antonacci’s office didn’t complete the vote count until 2 a.m. Speaking with reporters, he acknowledged that counting all the mail-in ballots on election night might not be realistic, even if it is the goal.

“We intend to count all our ballots election night or early next morning,” he said. “We know what we're up against in November. But our goal is to finish that night and we're done.”

Across the nation, a huge uptick in mail-in-voting is expected in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The reality is that Florida, even with its ongoing issues, has far more experience with voting by mail than many other states. Floridians have had the option to vote by mail since 2002.

In several states, vote-by-mail ballots can only start getting processed on Election Day for the 2020 election, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. These include Alabama, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Wyoming.

If people vote by mail in large numbers, in those states especially, it could bring a significant backlog in nationwide election results.

This could lead to a different, less final kind of election night — unlike what many Americans have come to expect in recent decades. But it would be far from unprecedented.

“Really only since World War Two have we had election results that we could call on election night,” said Ion Sancho, who served as the Supervisor of Elections in Florida’s Leon County for 28 years before retiring in 2016. “This is a relatively recent phenomenon.”

Sancho was in office during the contested 2000 presidential election in Florida, and has seen first-hand how the increasing prevalence of mail-in-voting should temper the public’s expectation of immediate, comprehensive election results.

“The growth of vote-by-mail ballots means that's next to impossible. It's just next to impossible to do,” said Sancho.

Copyright 2021 WLRN 91.3 FM. To see more, visit WLRN 91.3 FM.

Caitlin Switalski
Daniel Rivero is a reporter and producer for WLRN, covering Latino and criminal justice issues. Before joining the team, he was an investigative reporter and producer on the television series "The Naked Truth," and a digital reporter for Fusion.