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Tag: Florida abortion

  • Another lawsuit challenges Florida Gov. DeSantis’ anti-abortion amendment website

    Another lawsuit challenges Florida Gov. DeSantis’ anti-abortion amendment website

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    Photo by Matt Keller Lehman

    A political committee leading efforts to pass a constitutional amendment on abortion rights filed a lawsuit Thursday alleging that the state Agency for Health Care Administration is using a website and ads to spread “misinformation” about the November ballot measure.

    The lawsuit, filed in Leon County circuit court by attorneys for the Floridians Protecting Freedom committee, seeks a temporary injunction to prevent the agency from continuing to disseminate the information online and through television and radio ads.

    “In educating the electorate about the purpose and ramifications of a proposed constitutional amendment, the government cannot do so in a manner that is inaccurate, misleading, abusive, or fraudulent,” the lawsuit said. “AHCA’s actions regarding Amendment 4 (the abortion rights amendment) … have been inaccurate, misleading, abusive and fraudulent.”

    The lawsuit alleges that the agency has violated Floridians Protecting Freedom’s right to propose constitutional amendments and that state law prevents officials from participating in political advocacy.

    “Under the guise of providing ‘facts’ to the public, the website contains harmful statements that are fundamentally misleading at best, if not outright false,” the lawsuit said. “It includes multiple statements that lead only to the conclusion that AHCA is using its official authority or influence for the purpose of interfering with an election, or to influence votes and affect the result of the decision on Amendment 4.”

    But Gov. Ron DeSantis this week defended the agency’s information, describing it as “above board” and likening it to public-service announcements by other government agencies.

    “You know, we have resources to do public-service announcements across a wide variety of fronts. That goes to the Department of Transportation, for example, on safe driving,” DeSantis said Monday during an appearance in Miami Lakes. “It’s being used by the AHCA agency to basically provide people with accurate information. And I think that that’s something that’s really important, because, quite frankly, a lot of people don’t usually get that in the normal (information) bloodstream. So, everything that’s put out is factual. It’s not electioneering.”

    DeSantis is helping lead efforts to defeat the proposed constitutional amendment, which comes after the Legislature last year passed a law to prevent abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. In part, the proposed amendment says, no ”law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.”

    The website targeted in the lawsuit includes statements such as, “Current Florida Law Protects Women, Amendment 4 Threatens Women’s Safety.”

    Also, for example, it takes issue with wording of the amendment, such as the use of the term “healthcare provider,” which it contends “could include a wide range of professionals connected to healthcare which might differ from the current requirement that these important decisions be made only by a physician.”

    “Here’s the truth: The Florida Legislature will lose the ability to protect basic, common-sense health care regulations due to these open-ended and arbitrary terms,” the website says.

    But the lawsuit disputed such arguments and quoted a decision by the Florida Supreme Court that signed off on the ballot proposal’s wording.

    “The Florida Supreme Court rejected the claim that Amendment 4 was deceptive or misleading, finding that ‘the ballot title and summary fairly inform voters, in clear and unambiguous language, of the chief purpose of the amendment and they are not misleading,’” wrote attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida and Southern Legal Counsel, who are representing Floridians Protecting Freedom.

    An emergency motion for a temporary injunction filed with the lawsuit alleged that the state has “unlawfully weaponized taxpayer resources” to oppose the amendment.

    “Through this website, AHCA disparages Amendment 4 and Floridians Protecting Freedom as its sponsor, alleging fearmongering and lying,” the motion said. “AHCA presents voters with false information about Amendment 4 and current law and creates a sense of urgency that ‘Current Law Protects Women. Amendment 4 Threatens Women’s Safety,’ that Amendment 4 will ‘lead to unregulated and unsafe abortions,’ and ‘We must keep Florida from becoming an abortion tourism destination state.’ Voters can only be left with the impression that this state agency is advising them to vote no on Amendment 4.”

    But in an email Monday, the agency’s communications office said AHCA was providing facts and information to Floridians.

    “Part of the agency’s mission is to provide information and transparency to Floridians on the quality of care they receive,” the email said. “Our new transparency page serves to educate Floridians on the state’s current abortion laws and provide information on a proposed policy change that would impact care across the state.”

    The lawsuit came two days after Palm Beach County attorney Adam Richardson filed a case at the Florida Supreme Court about the agency information. Richardson asked the Supreme Court to issue what is known as a writ of quo warranto to Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Jason Weida, DeSantis and Attorney General Ashley Moody “forbidding them from misusing or abusing their offices to interfere with the election for Amendment 4, and to unravel whatever actions they have already taken to do so.”

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    Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida

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  • Florida defends decision to send election police to question those who signed abortion ballot petition

    Florida defends decision to send election police to question those who signed abortion ballot petition

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    Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd on Wednesday defended a statewide investigation into potentially fraudulent signatures used on petitions to help put an abortion rights state constitutional amendment on the November ballot.

    Testifying as one of six election officials in a hearing held by the House Administration Committee in Washington, Byrd was asked by Hillsborough County Republican U.S. Rep. Laurel Lee to explain why it was harmful to both the public and the elections process if fraud takes place during the petition-gathering process.

    “Those initiative petitions change or have the potential to change our state constitution,” he told Lee, whom Byrd succeeded as Florida’s Secretary of State after being appointed by DeSantis in May 2022.

    “If they pass, they enshrine it in state law. There are organizations and businesses that send people out of state into the states, pay them to gather signatures. We have victims of felony identity theft. They have come and reported that to us that their signature has been put — their identity has been stolen, their signature has been placed on a signature petition.

    “We have a duty and obligation to investigate and provide relief to those victims, but also most of the reports of election fraud in Florida are reported by the county election officials. It is happening and it is our duty under the law to investigate.”

    The Tampa Bay Times reported last week that the Department of State has asked supervisors of elections in at least six counties to collect approximately 36,000 signatures for the state to review. There have also been reports of state police showing up at voters’ homes to question them about whether they signed the petition to put Amendment 4 on the ballot.

    The Times reported that signatures involved in the probe have been validated by county election supervisors and that the deadline to challenge the validity of signatures has already passed.

    If approved, the measure would enshrine abortion rights into the Florida Constitution, but it is bitterly opposed by DeSantis and the Republican Party of Florida. A state agency has posted at taxpayer expense a website attacking the amendment, drawing a lawsuit alleging election interference.

    Election police

    Lee, who served as Florida’s Secretary of State from 2019 to 2022, also asked Byrd about the state’s Office of Election Crimes and Security, a state police force created in 2022 to ferret out voter fraud.

    “I think it’s really important to note that people think when they think of election fraud they think of the presidential race,” Byrd said.

    “Election fraud includes campaign finance violations, voter registration fraud, initiative petition fraud, candidate qualifying fraud. We investigate all of those, and for all of the people who say that there is no evidence of non-citizens voting, come to Florida, we have the evidence, because my office is required to report it to the governor and the Legislature every year.”

    Lee asked a series of leading questions to Byrd in an attempt to debunk some conspiracy theories raised by “voting integrity” activists in Florida.

    “While voting is going on during elections, or those voting systems ever connected to the internet?” she asked. Byrd said they were not connected to the internet, causing her to follow-up.

    “In other words, Secretary Byrd, is it possible to hack a voting system during an election?”

    “No, it is not,” he replied.

    In addition to Byrd, the secretaries of state from Ohio, Arizona, Michigan, West Virginia, and New Mexico participated in the hearing.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Diane Rado for questions: [email protected]. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.

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    Mitch Perry, Florida Phoenix

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  • ‘Threatens women’s safety’: State agency targets Florida abortion rights amendment

    ‘Threatens women’s safety’: State agency targets Florida abortion rights amendment

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    The Florida Agency for Health Care Administration launched a webpage Thursday bashing the proposed state constitutional amendment to restore abortion access beyond six weeks, prompting Florida Democrats to call out the use of state funds against the measure.

    The agency’s secretary, Jason Weida, wrote on X that the page is meant to “combat lies and disinformation surrounding Florida’s abortion laws.” However, the page states that Amendment 4 “threatens to expose women and children to health risks.”

    “The Florida Legislature will lose the ability to protect basic, common-sense health care regulations due to these open-ended arbitrary terms,” the webpage declares.

    Florida Democrats responded that the webpage violates Florida statutes barring state employees from using their authority to interfere with an election.

    “This anti-Amendment 4 website from AHCA is bullshit. Ron and his buddies know they’re losing, and they’re willing to do anything — including breaking the law — to rig the results in their favor,” Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried wrote in a statement.

    “Using state agency resources for campaign purposes is illegal, and we’re looking into any and all recourses to take this website down,” she added.

    Near the bottom of the page, the agency highlights funding Floridians Protecting Freedom, the sponsors of the amendment, received from organizations outside Florida. AHCA includes additional arguments against Amendment 4, mimicking thoughts Gov. Ron DeSantis has expressed, including that the language of the abortion-rights measure is too vague.

    The agency’s webpage includes a list of laws and regulations that supposedly would be at risk if Amendment 4 passes, such as sanitation standards and use of anesthesia.

    'Threatens women's safety': State agency targets Florida abortion rights amendment

    Screenshot via floridahealthfinder.com/FloridaCares

    Florida Department of State looking into Amendment 4 signatures

    With just 60 days until the election, the DeSantis administration is ramping up its campaign against the effort to protect abortion access in the state constitution. On Wednesday, the Tampa Bay Times broke the news that the Florida Department of State is reviewing 36,000 signatures among the 1 million collected to place Amendment 4 on the ballot.

    The state decided to conduct the review looking for fraud seven months after Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd certified the signatures.

    In August, the Florida Supreme Court allowed the state to include language on the November ballot asserting that the amendment could lead to expensive litigation and public funding of abortions through Medicaid. Aides to DeSantis and Republican legislative leaders sat on an estimating conference and insisted upon including that language in defiance of precedent.

    Democratic Rep. Ashley Gantt of Miami-Dade County told the Phoenix she was shocked and infuriated by the webpage.

    “This is completely anti-democratic behavior. This is insanity. And when people talk about ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ and that’s dystopian and it’s so far off, this is how it starts,” Gantt said. “It starts like this, and this people are emboldened and continue to be emboldened.”

    This was not the only controversy from AHCA on Thursday. A broadcast report from WCJB stated that a source within the agency had provided documents disclosing that the whistleblower of the administration’s plan to place golf courses and hotels in state parks had resigned from AHCA in January 2022 after being accused of sending harassing messages to a co-worker he had been in a relationship with.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Diane Rado for questions: [email protected]. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.

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    Jackie Llanos, Florida Phoenix

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  • Issues on Florida’s November ballot will include campaign funds, property taxes, hunting and more

    Issues on Florida’s November ballot will include campaign funds, property taxes, hunting and more

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    With the state Supreme Court this week signing off on ballot initiatives about abortion rights and recreational use of marijuana, Floridians in November will vote on six proposed constitutional amendments. Passage of each proposal would require support from at least 60 percent of voters. Here are brief descriptions of the six issues:

    — ABORTION: In what could be 2024’s biggest political issue in Florida, voters will decide whether to enshrine abortion rights in the state Constitution. The vote will come after Gov. Ron DeSantis and lawmakers approved preventing abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. The proposed constitutional amendment, in part, says: “No law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.”

    — CAMPAIGN MONEY: Lawmakers approved placing a measure on the ballot to again try to repeal a program that offers state matching funds to gubernatorial and state Cabinet candidates. Voters approved the matching-funds program in 1998, and a repeal attempt failed in 2010. When the program was created, supporters said it could help reduce the influence of big-money contributors in statewide elections, but critics have long derided the program as welfare for politicians.

    — FISHING AND HUNTING: Fishing and hunting have been traditions for generations of Floridians. Voters in November will decide whether to enshrine a right to fish and hunt in the state Constitution. With the backing of outdoors groups, lawmakers voted almost unanimously last year to place the measure on the ballot. In part, the proposal says hunting and fishing “shall be preserved forever as a public right and preferred means of responsibly managing and controlling fish and wildlife.”

    — MARIJUANA: Eight years after voters approved a constitutional amendment that broadly allowed medical marijuana, they will decide this year whether to give the go-ahead to recreational use of marijuana. The political committee Safe & Smart Florida, backed heavily by the Trulieve medical-marijuana company, led the drive to put the measure on the ballot. It would allow people ages 21 and older to “possess, purchase, or use marijuana products and marijuana accessories for non-medical personal consumption.”

    — PROPERTY TAXES: Homeowners could receive slightly larger property-tax breaks if voters approve a constitutional amendment that the Legislature put on the ballot. The proposal would lead to adjusting part of the homestead property-tax exemption for inflation. Homeowners receive tax exemptions on the assessed values of their property up to $25,000 and on the values between $50,000 and $75,000. The proposal would require adjusting for inflation the exempt portion currently between $50,000 and $75,000.

    — SCHOOL BOARD ELECTIONS: With supporters seeking to do away with a requirement that candidates run without party labels, voters will decide whether to hold partisan school-board elections. Florida historically had partisan school-board elections, but voters passed a constitutional amendment in 1998 to make the races non-partisan. Lawmakers, however, placed a measure on this year’s ballot that would return to partisan races starting in 2026. School board races in some areas have become battlegrounds in recent years.

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    Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida

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