Brenda
Snipes submits resignation as Broward elections supervisor
18
November, 2018
Just
hours after finishing a tumultuous election recount, Broward
Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes submitted her resignation,
ending a 15-year tenure full of botched elections, legal disputes and
blistering criticism.
“It
is true. She did send it,” said Burnadette Norris-Weeks, an
attorney who works as counsel to the Supervisor of Elections Office.
Evelyn
Perez-Verdia, a former office spokeswoman who left several years ago,
said Sunday evening she was told by people in the office that the
letter was sent “to Tallahassee” earlier in the day.
Norris-Weeks
said she saw an early draft of the letter. In the version she saw,
she said Snipes, 75, expressed a desire to spend more time with her
family.
The
voice mail on Snipes’ cell phone was full Sunday night, and she
didn’t immediately respond to a text message.
The
exact effective date of the resignation was unclear Sunday evening.
After
a bumpy day of missing ballots, troubled Broward recount put on ice
until the morning
Norris-Weeks
said she believes it was effective Jan. 2. Perez-Verdia said she was
told the effective date was Jan. 5.
A
January resignation would likely put responsibility for appointing a
replacement in the hands of Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis, rather than
outgoing Gov. Rick Scott.
DeSantis’s
swearing in is Jan. 8. Scott was elected to the U.S. Senate, and the
swearing-in for that job is Jan. 3. Scott hasn’t said when he’ll
leave office to become a senator, but Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez-Cantera
could be the state’s chief executive for several days in January.
During
the just-completed recount of the midterm election, Scott was a
fierce critic of Snipes, accusing her of years of incompetence and
asking the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to investigate what
he said “may be rampant fraud.” Scott never offered any proof of
fraud committed by Snipes.
Scott
was elected to the U.S. Senate in the Nov. 6 election, in which final
vote tallies were submitted by counties to the state on Sunday.
DeSantis,
elected governor at the same time, didn’t join in the criticism of
the election system — or Snipes — during drawn-out original vote
counting or the recount period.
Broward’s
vote counting was an outlier among the state’s 67 counties, taking
a long time to complete. For days, Snipes wouldn’t say how many
ballots were outstanding and uncounted and her office wasn’t
reporting updated results as frequently as the law required.
Trump
bashes Broward County and Brenda Snipes over election issues
And
there were repeated hiccups during the recount period, including
Snipes’ acknowledgment on Saturday that her office couldn’t find
2,040 ballots that had been included in the first vote count but not
in the machine recount of state elections.
She
said she was sure they were somewhere in her office, probably mixed
in with other ballots.
As
people grew impatient for finality in three close statewide elections
— governor, U.S. Senate and agriculture commissioner — local,
state and national attention focused on Snipes.
Besides
Scott, she was denounced by U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and
President Donald Trump. Snipes is a Democrat.
She’s
been subject to waves of criticism for long lines and slow vote
counts in multiple elections.
Most
serious was a circuit judge’s ruling earlier this year that her
office violated state and federal law by destroying ballots from the
2016 primary election too early. She authorized the ballot
destruction 12 months after the primary, instead of waiting 22 months
as required.
The
ballot destruction took place while the ballots were the subject of a
public records lawsuit from a losing candidate seeking to inspect the
documents.
In
2016, four voters reported receiving ballots that didn’t contain a
referendum on legalizing medical marijuana. Snipes’ office said the
problem wasn’t widespread, and a circuit court judge said she was
taking sufficient action to correct it.
Also
in 2016, in the primary election, results were posted on the
elections office website before the polls closed, a violation of
state law. An outside contractor took responsibility for the mistake.
And
in 2012, almost 1,000 uncounted ballots were discovered a week after
the election.
She’s
also been subjected to attacks that haven’t been supported by
evidence, most notably the assertions from Trump, Rubio and Scott
that there was fraud and, possibly, an attempt to steal elections
going on under her watch.
In
2016, Trump confidante Roger Stone falsely claimed that Snipes
secretly met with Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.
Before the election, he promised pictures would back up his
assertion; after the election, he recanted the accusation.
Marco
Rubio says he knows who’s to blame for Florida's election problems:
Broward’s Brenda Snipes
As
the agonizingly slow vote counting continued after the Nov. 6
election, Democrats said they wanted to ensure all votes were
counted, but prominent voices in her party didn’t rise to Snipes’
defense.
And
as party insiders in Broward began to sense political blood in the
water, they started talking behind the scenes about potential
replacements.
During
the final days of the recount, Snipes looked exhausted to people who
have known her for years. And she foreshadowed an early departure as
elections supervisor when she said last week “it is time to move
on” but didn’t specify a timetable, saying she wanted to talk to
her family.
Snipes
was appointed supervisor of elections in 2003 by former Gov. Jeb
Bush, after he removed a previous supervisor of elections for
incompetence. Bush became one of her critics last week, writing on
Twitter it was time for her to go.
She
was elected to a full term in 2004, then re-elected in 2008, 2012 and
2016. She makes $178,865 a year after a 20 percent raise in 2016, and
two smaller raises since then.
A
native of Alabama, Snipes came to Broward County in 1964. She was
recruited to teach in Broward schools by the legendary
African-American educator, Blanche Ely. Snipes began teaching at
Blanche Ely High School in Pompano Beach.
She
became a principal and school administrator, retiring as an area
director, responsible for supervising multiple schools.
Snipes
has a doctorate in education leadership from Nova Southeastern
University. She is referred to by virtually everyone — even her
fiercest critics — as “Dr. Snipes.”
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