With less than 12 hours before the polls open,
Republicans laid the groundwork for a possible legal challenge to the
presidential election with an eleventh-hour lawsuit questioning the
accuracy of the voting rolls in Broward County, the most heavily
Democratic county in Florida. In an emergency court hearing that ended
at 8:30 tonight, Broward County Circuit Judge David Krathen ruled that
the suit was groundless and he didn't want to ``micromanage the
election.'' The suit, filed late Monday, argued that inaccuracies in
the county's voting rolls will raise the possibility of fraud and
double voting. The party also challenged Broward County's procedures
for poll watchers, saying that they keep Republicans from adequately
monitoring the polls for people who are registered more than once, or
who are ineligible to vote because they are felons. [more]
`Brother Jeb' reigns over Florida elections [more]
FLORIDA: 13,000 Ballots Rushed From Voting Site, Must Be Recounted [more]
Deputy tackles, arrests journalist for photographing voters [more] and [more]
One day after the violent arrest of journalist and
Election Protection volunteer James S. Henry in Palm Beach County, the
nonpartisan Election Protection coalition has filed a lawsuit to allow
communication with voters outside the 50 foot buffer zone. Election
Supervisor Theresa LePore has also imposed rules that make it difficult
for nonpartisan voter education advocacy groups, such as the Election
Protection coalition, to distribute literature to voters as they wait
in line to vote, leading to today's lawsuit. [more]