Attorney General Ellison fights Florida’s discriminatory voting law in court

Joins coalition supporting mail-in and drop-box voting, opposing Florida’s attempt to defend restrictive law that was already struck down in court

August 17, 2022 (SAINT PAUL) — Minnesota Attorney General joined today a group of 17 attorneys general opposing Florida’s discriminatory law that would make it more difficult for millions of Floridians — especially the elderly, disabled, and communities of color — to vote. 

In an amicus brief filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in the case of League of Women Voters of Florida v. Florida Secretary of State, Attorney General Ellison and the coalition support a challenge to portions of SB90, a law that limits opportunities for people to vote by restricting the use of drop boxes for ballot collection. A lower court already struck down portions of SB90, finding that they were enacted to unlawfully burden Black voters by limiting when drop boxes could be used and where they could be placed in a way that was intentionally discriminatory. The attorneys general filed their brief in support of the lower court’s decision and argue that election security can be protected while increasing — not limiting — access to the ballot. 

“America is stronger when more people participate in our elections and our civic life — not fewer. We Minnesotans — who vote at the highest rate in the country in America’s best-run elections — know this better than anyone else. People organized hard for this, we’re proud of it, and we have a right to be,” Attorney General Ellison said. “I intervened in this Florida case because my job in protecting Minnesotans’ hard-won freedoms doesn’t end at Minnesota’s borders. All Minnesotans have an interest in elections being run fairly, inclusively, and without discrimination in Florida and every state.” 

In the brief, Attorney General Ellison and the coalition argue that:  

Joining Attorney General Ellison in the amicus brief are District of Columbia Attorney General Karl A. Racine and New York Attorney General Letitia James, who led the brief, and the attorneys general of California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Washington.