As he prepares to launch his second voter purge in less than two years, Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s administration is finally admitting that his first purge effort was less than perfect.
“I accept responsibility for the effort,” Scott’s Secretary of State Ken Detzner, told the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times. “It could have been better. It should have been better.”
Detzner, Scott’s top elections official, oversaw the much-maligned 2012 purge, which he defended as his “moral duty.” His latest remarks come as he tours the state trying to convince local elections officials and voters that the new purge effort won’t be quite so troublesome. During that effort to purge the voter rolls, an initial list of 182,000 potential non-citizens was whittled down to 2,600 and then down to 198, but still wasn’t pursued in some areas where local officials were distrustful of the data.
Dozens of elections supervisors across the state refused to follow through with that purge, including Leon County supervisor of elections Ion Sancho, one of the purge’s biggest critics refusing to apply the flawed list to his county, and claiming the move was a “partisan endeavor” from the Scott administration.









