National Review Online
Sunday, November 11, 2018
Brenda Snipes, the supervisor of elections in Florida’s
Broward County, does not deserve to be within a thousand miles of any election
office anywhere in these United States. She should be fired at the earliest
possible opportunity.
Snipes has held her position since 2003, in which year
her predecessor, Miriam Oliphant, was suspended for “grave neglect,
mismanagement and incompetence” and, quite literally, marched out of her
office. Alas, Snipes has proven no better at fulfilling her duties than was
Oliphant. On Friday, a court in Broward County found that Snipes was guilty of
violating both Florida’s public-records laws and the state’s constitution by
failing to provide mandatory updates to the public, and it ordered the
immediate release of the missing information. As that ruling was coming down,
Snipes’s office was laying out more lawsuit bait. According to the Miami Herald, an election worker found
bags of “uncounted early ballots” in the Broward County office — ballots whose
provenance could not be established. Snipes, meanwhile, was busy mixing
together rejected provisional ballots and accepted provisional ballots,
processing them all together. She justified her decision to add these
provisional ballots to the official tally on the grounds that it would be
better to include some illegal votes than to nix the legal ones with which, by
her own incompetence, they had been blended.
Such behavior is by no means out of character. This year
alone, Snipes has been reprimanded by the courts twice: once, in May, for
illegally destroying ballots during the 2016 Democratic primary, in violation
of both state and federal law; and again, in August, for illegally opening
mail-in ballots in secret. How long, we wonder, does it take to establish a
pattern?
Although Ron DeSantis and Rick Scott hold electoral leads
that are unlikely to be reversed, both races remain close enough to have
triggered recounts. One does not need to believe that Snipes is engaged in
widespread fraud to grasp that her rank incompetence is guaranteed to diminish
faith in that process. Florida has a host of laws on the books that were
designed to ensure that its citizens can track elections in as close to real
time as possible. When those laws are ignored — and when the press is met with hostility,
defiance, and indifference — it becomes more difficult to guarantee that
nothing untoward is going on. During elections, “Trust us” is an extraordinary
request, even from a figure of unimpeachable record. From Brenda Snipes, it is
farcical.
It should be clear by now that Broward County has a
systemic problem with its management of elections. (Guess which county was at
the heart of the 2000 Florida recount?) 2018 is the 18th year in a row in which
its elections commission has been headed up by an arrogant bungler (in the best
case), and yet voters in the county keep reelecting those bunglers every two
years. On present evidence, if Brenda Snipes is to be removed from her role, it
will once again be because the governor cries “Enough.” When Ron DeSantis takes
office in January, he should fire Snipes. And when he has done that, he should
insist that Broward County take a good, hard look in the mirror, the better to
ask how long it wishes to remain a den of blustery incompetence, or worse.
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