Some good news for democracy in Florida.
A federal judge says he’ll issue a permanent injunction against provisions in the state’s new election law that restricted third-party voter registration drives.
U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle said today he intends to permanently block the law, pending the case’s dismissal from a Court of Appeals.
Hinkle ordered a temporary injunction on May 31, declaring that the law, enacted by the state legislature’s Republican majority and signed by Gov. Rick Scott (R), put “harsh and impractical” restrictions on civic groups focused on registering new voters.
“This order is a decisive victory for Florida voters,” said Lee Rowland of the Brennan Center’s Democracy Program, one of the attorneys who argued the case for the plaintiffs.
“The Florida legislature has tried repeatedly to stifle access to voter registration opportunities, and once again a federal court has stopped them in their tracks,” Rowland. “We are thrilled that voter registration groups can now get back to what they do best — expanding our democracy.”
The suit was filed by the League of Women Voters of Florida, Rock the Vote, and the Florida Public Interest Research Group Education Fund. The Justice Department also challenged the restrictions in a separate lawsuit.
As we told you last night, a new analysis by the Florida Times-Union shows that since a new set of state voting laws went into effect last year (July 1, 2011), the number of new Democrats registering in Florida has all but disappeared.









