A federal court ruled that Florida cannot cut the number of early voting days from 12 to eight in several counties because it could “disproportionately affect” minorities.
The three-judge panel cited protections under section 5 of the Voting Rights Act in its decision, which prevents localities from making certain changes to voting rules without clearance from federal officials. Specifically, five of Florida’s 67 counties are protected, the court noted.
The Florida legislature approved the reduction in hours last year in a bill that included a variety of changes to the state’s election rules and Gov. Rick Scott signed the bill into law May 19, 2011.
The judges wrote in their decision:
We cannot, at this time, preclear Florida’s early voting changes because the State has failed to satisfy its burden of proving that those changes will not have a retrogressive effect on minority voters. Specifically, the State has not proven that the changes will be nonretrogressive if the covered counties offer only the minimum number of early voting hours that they are required to offer under the new statute, which would constitute only half the hours required under the prior law.
In writing their opinion the panel did leave room for the law to go forward as long as the maximum number of hours allowed under it, rather than standard practices, were utilized for early voting. The judges cited the inclusion of additional weekend voting time, Sunday in particular, as a way to offset the impact of less days of available voting.








