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General News    H3'ed 2/27/20

Chad Won't Leave Votes Hanging in Broward County Florida

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Steve Schneider

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Count on Chad
(Image by Chad Klitzman 2020)
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"Chad Klitzman won't leave your vote hanging"

The second-most populous county in the third-most populous state is known for election-related controversy, especially when it comes to making sure all votes are counted.

Are the problems a result of corruption? Incompetence? Or indifference by the overwhelmingly Democratic voters, citizens and leaders in Broward County?

Different people will offer different answers to explain why it has been so difficult to find someone to run the Broward Supervisor of Elections office in a way that inspires trust and confidence.

For example, a Democratic Broward Supervisor of Elections was removed by a Republican governor in 2003. click here

She was replaced by another Democratic Supervisor of Elections, who was also removed by a GOP governor in 2018. click here

What follows is an email interview with Chad Klitzman who is one of a handful of Democrats who wants to run the office next year when the Republican appointee will step down. This interview appears as the outgoing supervisor, Peter Antonacci, has agreed to cooperate with a nonpartisan group of citizen auditors in the 2020 elections. click here

1. Ironically your first name is Chad, and your campaign slogan is "Chad won't leave your vote hanging". We all remember that it was hanging chads in South Florida in the 2000 presidential election that made news around the world. What does the hanging chad debacle say about the need for supervisors of elections to maintain election equipment properly? click here

The 2000 debacle demonstrates we must do our best to anticipate challenges before they arise in an effort to make the voting experience as seamless as possible. Whether it is the hanging chad or the glitchy app in Iowa, we have seen time and time again that poor planning results in confidence in the system being undermined and this has a negative effect on turnout.

2. South Florida made news a second way in the 2000 presidential election. That's when studies showed thousands of elderly Jewish voters may have voted for Pat Buchanan, even though they meant to vote for Al Gore. Those possible lost Gore votes gave the election to George Bush, the Republican who narrowly defeated Gore, the Democrat. What does this problem in neighboring Palm Beach County say about the need for supervisors of elections to design ballots so that voters understand them? click here

Ironically, the reason Palm Beach County used its now infamous "butterfly ballot" was because their Supervisor of Elections was trying to make the voting experience easier for elderly voters by increasing the font size. Problems that have occurred in Broward and Palm Beach underscore the need for the Supervisors of Elections to not only have a well-honed attention to detail but also to share proposed ballot designs with community leaders and the public at large so there is sufficient time for folks to provide comments and identify issues before they arise at the polls. I should note though that much of the ballot design process is driven by state statute.

3. In 2018, possibly thousands of voters in Broward County did not vote in the U.S. Senate race, again because of an alleged faulty ballot design. What will you do if elected to make sure Broward County voters will be looking at ballots that are easy to read and understand? Are there outside, independent experts you can consult? Will you? click here

The election code was updated last year to prevent the design in question from being permitted under the law. I would welcome independent experts, as well as the public, to provide feedback to ensure that ballots are as easy to read and understand as possible.

4. All of the candidates for Broward Supervisor of Elections are Democrats. At least two of the candidates have extensive experience working for the Democratic Party in Broward. This background may give them an advantage in attracting supporters, contributions and voters. In contrast, you are a 26-year-old Broward native. Do you see any advantages to your background? If so, what are they?

While I am a lifelong Democrat and proudly served in the Obama White House, I maintain that both my age and my independence from local party politics uniquely suit me for this role. Not only do we need someone in the job who has the energy, enthusiasm and creativity to get people engaged in the process, but we also need someone without an overtly partisan history so confidence in the process can be restored in the minds of all voters.

5. Jeh Johnson, the Homeland Security chief in the Obama Administration, endorsed you recently. Did you meet him when you interned in the Obama Administration? Or did you get to know Johnson when you worked at the New York City law firm where he is a partner? click here

I met Secretary Johnson while working at Paul Weiss. I am honored to have Secretary Johnson's support at a time when election security is top of mind for many voters. When he served at the Department of Homeland Security, Secretary Johnson designated election infrastructure as "critical infrastructure," opening up a federal funding source for election security and integrity programs.

6. Election security is an important issue after the documented Russian attack on our 2016 elections. Have you talked with election security experts? Can you name some of them? What have they suggested you do if you are elected Supervisor of Elections in Broward County? click here

In addition to Secretary Johnson, I have met with almost 30 Supervisors of Elections (some of whom had a tech/security background) and a few election integrity experts. While there are many initiatives I am interested in bringing to Broward, my top priorities are daily backups of voter registration logs, improved firewall technology on our tabulators and reporting systems and biometric scanning (fingerprints) security technology in the office, which other counties have installed as a result of Department of Homeland Security grants.

7. Voter suppression is an important issue. Can you give me some specific examples of voter suppression that you have witnessed in Florida? In other parts of the country? What can you do if you are elected Supervisor of Elections to speak out against this anti-democratic effort? Will you also have the platform to testify in the Legislature, lobby your fellow supervisors of elections and propose concrete solutions? If so, what are some of those solutions?

Voter suppression is very much a reality in Florida. The roll-out of Amendment 4, a voter-approved initiative that restored voting rights to those with felony convictions, was implemented in a manner that amounts to a poll tax. People serving in elected office who feel the only way they can retain their power is by suppressing the vote have no business holding elected office. Severe gerrymandering and requiring folks to register to vote 29 days in advance of the election are other ways in which the votes of Floridians are regularly suppressed. However, as Supervisor of Elections, I would have no choice but to follow the law. One of the reasons I am excited at the prospect of serving as Supervisor of Elections in a place as large as Broward is that I will have a platform on the local, state and federal levels to speak out on the various voting rights issues I care about. I also intend to be active in the State Association of Supervisors of Elections, which regularly lobbies the legislature for electoral reforms.

8. You led a Broward County group that worked with school-age children to get them interested in voting. What can you do to make the system more available to young people and other Broward County citizens who have not registered or voted? .broward.k12.fl.us/kidsvoting/

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Steve Schneider lives in South Florida. He writes articles for Op Ed News and Democracy Chronicles.

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