Florida Republicans had every reason to be pleased with how Election Day 2020 unfolded. The state’s system of elections worked exactly as intended, and GOP candidates excelled in the Sunshine State up and down the ballot.
That, however, was not good enough. As Republicans nationwide embraced Donald Trump’s Big Lie, and GOP officials sought ways to place new hurdles between voters and their democracy, Florida Republicans approved a series of new voter-suppression measures in the spring.
But for the right, that wasn’t good enough either. Politico reported last month GOP officials in the state were “under mounting pressure” from their own allies to conduct a “forensic audit” of the 2020 elections — despite the fact that Republicans had a very good year in the state.
Roger Stone has even threatened to run against Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis next year because, as far as the former Trump advisor and pardoned felon is concerned, the governor isn’t addressing the “phantom voters” conspiracy theory.
And so, DeSantis appears ready to follow, not lead. The Tampa Bay Times reported this week:
Six months after signing what he called the strongest election security bill in the nation, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Wednesday said he wanted to beef up the state’s voting laws and create a new office to investigate and prosecute election-related fraud…. “We’re going to do another package of election integrity reforms that is going to make Florida way No. 1 by a long shot anywhere in the country,” DeSantis said.
Remember, there were no problems with Florida’s elections, which produced results Republicans liked. The party nevertheless made it more difficult for Floridians to cast ballots in future elections.
The right said that wasn’t good enough, and so the governor is prepared to try again to satisfy his own party’s election opponents.
Time will tell exactly what the next round of voter-suppression measures might include, but DeSantis suggested dead Floridians received ballots — a claim unsupported by evidence — and added that he doesn’t believe ballot drop-boxes should exist anywhere in the state.
The governor also announced plans for a state law enforcement office that would be dedicated specifically to election-related crimes, none of which appear to exist in any meaningful numbers.








