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Dark Money in Florida Politics Highlights where Professor Levinson was Right
Guest Blogger
This post was prepared for a roundtable onVoting Rights,
convened as part of LevinsonFest 2022—a year-long series gathering scholars from diverse
disciplines and viewpoints to reflect on Sandy Levinson’s influential work in
constitutional law.
Ciara
Torres-Spelliscy
“There
is no such thing as a perfect electoral system, any more than there is a
perfect political society.” said Professor Sandy Levinson on November
7, 2016. But surely we can do better than what has happened recently in Florida
elections with dark money funding bogus candidates to trick voters.
Because
of Florida’s most famous resident, a petulant ex-president with a mounting list of legal
problems, the press has largely missed a slowly unraveling scandal in Florida’s
state elections. The local press has dubbed this the ghost candidate
scandal.
The
scandal broke through after
the 2020 election, when Republicans in the state got caught running bogus no-party-affiliated
candidates to help the election of certain Republicans, especially in the
Florida Senate. But the practice of running these
fake/bogus/insincere/charlatan/ghost candidates happened in the 2018 election too. It’s possible this
underhanded practice goes back even earlier.
This
may partially explain why the Florida legislature is so tilted towards
Republicans when the Florida voting population is nearly evenly split between
Democrats and Republicans. According to Pew in 2020: “Democrats
and Republicans now make up similar shares of Florida’s registered voters (37%
and 36%, respectively)[.]” In the Florida legislature 23 of 40 senate seats are
held by Republicans and 76 of 120 house seats are held by Republicans.
Prosecutors
have indicted several individuals including two of the ghost candidates
themselves: Rodriguez and Iannotti. Iannotti has pleaded
not guilty. Rodriguez entered a plea agreement and pled guilty to his role in the
scam.
Meanwhile,
Ben Paris, Seminole County GOP Chair and ex-Longwood mayor was found guilty in ghost candidate
scheme for aiding ghost candidate Iannotti on September 1, 2022. Still awaiting
trial are ghost candidate Iannotti as well as ex-State Senator
Frank Artilles
who stands accused of bribing Alex Rodriguez to be a ghost candidate.
Thousands
of voters in each of the impacted Florida senate districts were tricked into voting
for the ghost candidates after hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of
mailers were sent to Democratic voters urging them to vote for the non-party
affiliated Iannotti, Rodriguez and Alfonso. The mailers for Iannotti and
Rodriguez were identical save the candidates name and featured a stock photo of
an attractive black woman. Neither Iannotti nor
Rodriguez are black.
It’s
arguable that the votes for ghost candidates in Districts 9 and 39 didn’t
matter electorally. But the race in District 37 with sound-alike candidate Alex
Rodriguez seemingly did make a difference in his race against democratic
incumbent José Javier
Rodríguez. The Republican in that race won by 32 votes. The “shill”
candidate Alex Rodriguez siphoned off 6,382 votes.
The
local press has traced the money for the ghost candidates to Florida Power and
Light (FPL) after a whistle blower for a dark money group called Matrix started feeding
troves of secret documents to Florida media outlets. Florida Power and Light is
large electricity utility company. Florida Power and Light is also a subsidiary
of a publicly traded company called Next Era Energy (ticker NYSE: NEE).
If
the revelations out of 2020 weren’t troubling enough, the press has also found
that FPL/NextEra did the same damn thing in 2018. According to the Miami
Herald, they secretly backed no-party-affiliated
candidate Charles Goston to help unseat a FPL/NextEra critic in the state
legislature.
The
public only knows all of this because a disgruntled employee of a dark money
group is telling the press what happened. As Professor Levinson once said, “money shouts in elections.” But voters need to
be clear exactly who is doing the shouting.
Florida,
like many states, needs better transparency laws for campaign finance that
capture money flowing through dark money conduits into the political system.
Had the mailers pushing the ghost candidates said “sponsored by Florida Power
and Light,” voters might have thought of them far more skeptically than the
scrappy effort of an independent candidate that they appeared to be.
Professor
Levinson cogently pointed to two types of corruption potentially caused
by money in politics: “individual candidates may sell themselves to the highest
bidders. The other is systemic: the inequality of funds among candidates means
that the well-funded can buy much greater access to the public forum than can the
poorly funded.” In the case of the three Republican candidates who won, who
knows how much they are beholden to FPL/Next Era. But FPL/Next Era has
certainly been lobbying to stall the
adoption of roof top solar which would make Floridians less dependent on their expensive service. And they
recently raised the cost of
electricity in Florida.
In
2020, the ghost candidates appeared as 11th hour October surprises.
This could happen again in this year’s election where Florida is electing its
legislature and its governor.
Until
Florida fixes its lack of transparency of money in politics, voters need to
beware that voting for candidates that parachute into a race at the last minute
on the non-party affiliated line could be the latest participant in a cynical vote
siphoning scheme. Voting for these candidates is often seen by voters as a
protest vote against the two establishment parties. But the net impact is that establishment
Republicans are elected and re-elected.
Ciara
Torres-Spelliscy is a Fellow at the Brennan Center, a Professor of Law at
Stetson University, and the author of the book Political Brands. You can reach her
at ctorress@law.stetson.edu.