
But when asked about the 2020 presidential election, Secretary of State Cord Byrd said there were โirregularitiesโ in other states and refused to say whether President Joe Biden won the election.
Byrd, who served in the Florida House until Gov. Ron DeSantis tapped the Neptune Beach Republican as secretary of state earlier this month, told reporters that Florida needs to be proactive in combating efforts to interfere with upcoming elections.
“Voting is a right and we want to encourage everybody that wants to exercise that right that they have that ability,โ he said prior to addressing the Florida Supervisors of Elections association at the groupโs mid-winter conference in Miramar Beach.
โYou just heard in some of the training this morning that we send out cards to people who are eligible to vote but unregistered,โ Byrd added. โSo, we are doing our part at the state level and the supervisors are doing their part at the county level to provide as much information, as much access to the ballot as humanly possible.”
DeSantisโ May 13 appointment of Byrd, who was at the forefront of some of the most controversial legislation supported by the governor, to succeed Laurel Lee immediately drew pushback from Democrats. Lee stepped down from the post to run for Congress.
House Democrats were quick to question Byrdโs temperament, calling him a โconspiracy theoristโ and a โhyper-partisan GOP loyalist.โ
In March, DeSantis appointed Byrdโs wife, Esther, to the State Board of Education.
The Byrds left Twitter after Esther Byrd drew criticism for tweeting about the storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of former President Donald Trump on Jan. 6, 2021.
But when pressed about whether Biden won the election Trump, Byrd pointed to issues with voting in several other states.
โHe was certified as the president. He is the president of the United States,โ Byrd said of Biden. โThere were irregularities in certain states. โฆ I’m not the secretary of state of Wisconsin or Pennsylvania or Arizona. That’s up to their voters. We in Florida had a successful election in 2020. And that’s what I want to continue to have in 2022.โ
Floridaโs 2020 election was โsuccessful and accurate. The governor has made that clear,โ Byrd said. Trump defeated Biden by more than three percentage points in Florida.
โBut we also know that people want to interfere and sow chaos, and they get smarter and more creative,โ Byrd added, defending controversial election-law measures approved by state lawmakers over the past two years. โJust like you donโt wait until there is a fire in your house to buy a fire extinguisher, we canโt wait for a problem to surface to address it when it comes to election laws.โ
As part of their conference Tuesday morning, elections supervisors shared repetitive steps they continue to take to keep ballots secure as they implement recent changes to the voting process.
โWe are all going to be under a microscope this year like we have never ever been,โ St. Johns County Supervisor of Elections Vicky Oakes told her colleagues.
After Trump’s defeat in 2020, Republicans across the country argued that steps needed to be taken to combat voter fraud.
The GOP-controlled Florida Legislature last year approved a sweeping election-law measure that in part restricts supervisorsโ use of โdrop boxesโ for submitting vote-by-mail ballots, prevents groups from providing items such as food and water to voters waiting in line at polling places, and imposes additional regulations on voter-registration organizations.
Voting-rights groups filed a lawsuit challenging the 2021 law, arguing that it was intended to make it harder for Black and Hispanic Floridians to register and vote. Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker ruled that the law was unconstitutionally intended to discriminate against Black voters. But a three-judge panel of the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals this month put Walkerโs ruling on hold, meaning the controversial law will almost certainly be kept in place for the 2022 elections.
DeSantis has said that Byrd will ensure the stateโs elections will be โrun efficiently and transparentlyโ and that the new laws should give Floridians โmore confidenceโ about the voting process.
Byrd said Tuesday more changes may be needed following the 2022 election cycle.
“We don’t want to change the law and change anything else coming into the election officials. We’ve already put enough on their plate,โ Byrd said. โBut certainly, after the 2022 election, there will be time to contemplate and see what other improvements we can make.” In defending the new election crimes office, Byrd said the agency with 15 non-sworn officers will consolidate state and local efforts, similar to how federal terrorism was addressed after the 9/11 attacks.
Byrd indicated that work already may be lined up for the new office, which will be staffed by data analysts and former law enforcement workers, as soon as its director is hired.
โWe have potential cases that may be ready once that person, the director, is in place,โ he said.
This article appears in May 19-25, 2022.
