CS/CS/HB 1355

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to elections; amending s. 97.012, F.S.;
3expanding the list of responsibilities of the Secretary of
4State when acting in his or her capacity as chief election
5officer; amending s. 97.021, F.S.; redefining the term
6"minor political party"; amending s. 97.025, F.S.;
7replacing a requirement for the Department of State to
8print copies of a pamphlet containing the Election Code
9with a requirement that the pamphlet be made available;
10amending s. 97.0575, F.S.; requiring that third-party
11voter registration organizations register with the
12Division of Elections and provide the division with
13certain information; requiring that the division or a
14supervisor of elections make voter registration forms
15available to third-party voter registration organizations;
16requiring that such forms contain certain information;
17requiring that the division maintain a database of certain
18information; requiring supervisors of elections to provide
19specified information to the division in a format and at
20times required by the division; requiring that such
21information be updated and made public daily at a
22specified time; requiring third-party voter registration
23organizations to deliver collected voter registration
24applications within a specified period; revising penalty
25provisions to conform; specifying grounds for an
26affirmative defense to a violation of timely submission
27requirements; providing for the referral of violations to
28the Attorney General; authorizing the Attorney General to
29initiate a civil action; providing that an action for
30relief may include a permanent or temporary injunction, a
31restraining order, or any other appropriate order;
32requiring that the division adopt rules for specified
33purposes; providing for retroactive application of certain
34requirements applicable to third-party voter registration
35organizations; deleting provisions providing for fines to
36be in addition to criminal penalties; deleting provisions
37providing a continuing appropriation of the proceeds of
38fines; amending s. 97.071, F.S.; requiring that voter
39information cards contain the address of the polling place
40of the registered voter; requiring a supervisor of
41elections to issue a new voter information card to a voter
42upon a change in a voter's address of legal residence or a
43change in a voter's polling place address; providing
44instructions for implementation by the supervisors of
45elections; amending s. 97.073, F.S.; requiring a
46supervisor to notify an applicant within 5 business days
47regarding disposition of the voter registration
48applications; amending s. 97.1031, F.S.; revising the
49methods by which a person must update his or her voter
50registration due to a change of address; revising
51procedures for an elector to change his or her party
52affiliation; requiring an elector to notify the supervisor
53of elections when the elector changes his or her name;
54amending s. 98.075, F.S.; revising procedures for the
55removal of deceased persons and other potentially
56ineligible persons from the statewide voter registration
57system; amending s. 98.093, F.S.; revising requirements
58for the Department of Corrections to provide the
59Department of State with information relating to convicted
60felons; requiring the Florida Parole Commission to
61regularly furnish data to the Department of State relating
62to persons who have been granted clemency; amending s.
6398.0981, F.S.; providing timeframes and formats for voting
64history information to be sent by the supervisors of
65elections to the department; providing timeframes and
66formats for voting history information to be sent by the
67department to the President of the Senate, the Speaker of
68the House of Representatives, and the respective minority
69leaders; requiring submission of precinct-level
70information in a certain format by a time certain;
71amending s. 99.012, F.S., relating to restrictions on
72individuals qualifying for public office; providing that
73if a final court order determines that a person did not
74comply with specified provisions, the person is not
75qualified as a candidate and his or her name may not
76appear on ballot; providing for nonapplicability to
77presidential and vice presidential candidates; amending s.
7899.021, F.S.; revising the candidate oath requirement for
79a person seeking to qualify for nomination or election or
80as a candidate of a political party; removing a
81requirement for the qualifying officer to provide a
82printed copy of the candidate oath; removing a requirement
83for taking the public employee oath; clarifying that
84candidates for Unites States President and Vice President
85need not subscribe certain oaths; correcting references
86for other oaths; amending s. 99.061, F.S.; revising the
87timeframe for a candidate to pay a qualifying fee under
88certain circumstances; requiring checks to be payable as
89prescribed by the filing officer; requiring signatures on
90certain oaths to be verified; removing a requirement for a
91public employee oath; requiring the filing of a verified
92notarized financial disclosure statement; clarifying the
93time for qualifying papers to be received; providing that
94the qualifying officer performs a ministerial duty only;
95exempting a decision by the qualifying officer from the
96Administrative Procedure Act; amending s. 99.063, F.S.;
97requiring a candidate's oath to be verified; deleting a
98requirement for a candidate to file a loyalty oath with
99the Department of State by a certain date; amending s.
10099.092, F.S.; providing for the transfer of the election
101assessment to the Elections Commission Trust Fund;
102amending s. 99.093, F.S.; providing for the election
103assessments paid by a person seeking to qualify for a
104municipal office to be forwarded by the qualifying officer
105to the Florida Elections Commission; amending s. 99.095,
106F.S.; allowing a candidate to obtain the required number
107of signatures from any registered voter regardless of
108district boundaries in a year of apportionment; amending
109s. 99.097, F.S.; providing for the Department of State to
110adopt rules to verify petitions through random sampling;
111creating exceptions for certain petitions from the
112authorization to use random sampling to verify petitions;
113revising criteria that a supervisor of elections must use
114to determine whether a petition may be counted as valid;
115providing that an exemption from paying fees to verify
116petitions does not apply if a person has been paid to
117solicit signatures; providing that contributions received
118after the filing of an undue burden oath must first be
119used to pay fees for verifying petitions; amending s.
120100.061, F.S.; increasing the time period between a
121primary election and a general election; amending s.
122100.101, F.S.; conforming a provision to changes made by
123the act; amending s. 100.111, F.S.; deleting provisions
124relating to vacancies in a state or county office because
125an incumbent qualified as a candidate for federal office;
126providing for a filing officer, rather than the Department
127of State, to notify a political party that it may nominate
128a person for office if certain events cause the party to
129have a vacancy in nomination; revising provisions relating
130to the filling of a vacancy in a nomination; deleting a
131defined term; providing that a vacancy in nomination is
132not created as the result of certain court orders;
133amending s. 100.371, F.S.; deleting provisions relating to
134a right to revoke a signature on an initiative petition;
135reducing the time period for which a signed and dated
136initiative petition form is valid; requiring an initiative
137sponsor to submit an initiative form to the supervisor of
138elections for the county of residence of the person
139signing the form for verification; providing procedures
140for misfiled petitions; revising criteria for a supervisor
141of elections to verify a signature on an initiative
142petition form; deleting provisions relating to petition
143signature revocations; amending s. 101.001, F.S.;
144requiring the supervisors of elections to provide the
145department with precinct data including specified
146information; requiring the department to maintain a
147searchable database containing certain precinct and census
148block information; requiring supervisors of elections to
149notify the department of precinct changes within a
150specified time; deleting a waiver; amending s. 101.043,
151F.S.; replacing references to the word "voter" with
152"elector"; providing that the address on an elector's
153identification may not be used to confirm or challenge an
154elector's legal residence; providing that the elector may
155not be asked to provide additional information or to
156recite his or her home address under certain
157circumstances; amending s. 101.045, F.S.; permitting a
158change of residence at the polling place for a person
159changing residence within a county; providing that a
160person whose change of address is from outside the county
161may not change his or her legal residence at the polling
162place or vote a regular ballot but may vote a provisional
163ballot; providing an exception; amending s. 101.131, F.S.;
164revising procedures for the designation of poll watchers;
165requiring that the Division of Elections prescribe a form
166for the designation of poll watchers; providing conditions
167under which poll watchers are authorized to enter polling
168areas and watch polls; requiring that a supervisor of
169elections provide identification to poll watchers by a
170specified period before early voting begins; requiring
171that poll watchers display such identification while in a
172polling place; amending s. 101.151, F.S.; authorizing the
173use of ballot-on-demand technology to produce election-day
174ballots; deleting a requirement that the use of such
175technology be authorized in writing by the Secretary of
176State; revising provisions relating to ballot headings and
177the order of candidates appearing on a ballot; amending s.
178101.161, F.S.; requiring the Department of State to
179provide the supervisors of elections either a ballot
180summary to a joint resolution to amend the State
181Constitution or the full text of the amendment or revision
182if a ballot summary is not included in the joint
183resolution; providing that a joint resolution may include
184multiple ballot statements set forth in order of priority;
185providing requirements for ballot statements; detailing
186responsibilities of the Department of State with respect
187to providing ballot information to supervisors of
188elections; prescribing the styling of ballot statements;
189specifying a time period and procedures to initiate an
190action to challenge an amendment to the State Constitution
191proposed by the Legislature; requiring the court,
192including an appellate court, to accord the case priority
193over other cases; requiring the Attorney General to revise
194a ballot title or ballot summary for an amendment proposed
195by the Legislature under certain circumstances; providing
196a 10-day deadline and procedures for challenging revised
197ballot titles or summaries; requiring the Department of
198State to forward modified ballot language to supervisors
199of elections; creating a presumption of validity of a
200ballot statement that contains the full text of an
201amendment or revision; providing for retroactive
202application of the amendments to s. 101.161, F.S.;
203amending s. 101.5605, F.S.; requiring an electromechanical
204voting system to satisfy the standards for certification
205adopted by rule of the Department of State; amending s.
206101.5606, F.S.; deleting requirements for
207electromechanical voting systems to have the capability to
208produce precinct totals in marked or punched form;
209amending s. 101.56075, F.S.; providing that all voting
210systems utilized after a certain time shall permit
211placement on the ballot of the full text of a
212constitutional amendment or revision; amending s.
213101.5612, F.S.; revising the sample size of
214electromechanical voting systems that include the
215electronic or electromechanical tabulation devices to be
216tested; amending s. 101.5614, F.S.; deleting provisions
217relating to the use of ballot cards and write-in ballots
218or envelopes; amending s. 101.591, F.S.; removing the
219audit requirement by the canvassing board if a manual
220recount is undertaken; amending s. 101.62, F.S.; extending
221the validity of an absentee ballot request to include all
222elections to the end of the calendar year of the second
223ensuing regularly scheduled general election; revising the
224timeframe for supervisors to electronically update
225absentee ballot request information; specifying types of
226elections for which a supervisor of elections must send an
227absentee ballot to uniformed services voters and overseas
228voters; specifying a time period during which a supervisor
229of elections must begin mailing absentee ballots; removing
230requirements that an elector provide certain information
231when requesting an absentee ballot from the county
232supervisor of elections; amending s. 101.65, F.S.;
233revising the form of the instructions to absent electors;
234stating that an absentee ballot is considered illegal if
235the signature on the voter's certificate does not match
236the signature on record; providing instructions for
237updating a signature on a voter registration application;
238amending s. 101.657, F.S.; requiring the supervisor of
239elections to provide to the division the address and hours
240of operation of early voting sites; reducing the early
241voting period for elections with state or federal races;
242removing timetables with respect to early voting in
243special elections; removing restrictions with respect to
244daily hours of operation of early voting sites;
245authorizing a supervisor of elections to provide early
246voting for elections not held in conjunction with a state
247or federal election; amending s. 101.68, F.S.; extending
248the time for canvassing and processing absentee ballots to
24915 days before the election; amending s. 101.6923, F.S.;
250revising the form of the special absentee ballot
251instructions for certain first-time voters; stating that
252an absentee ballot is considered illegal if the signature
253on the voter's certificate does not match the signature on
254record; providing instructions for updating a signature on
255a voter registration application; amending s. 101.75,
256F.S.; deleting a requirement for the dates of the
257qualifying period for certain municipal elections to run
258for no less than 14 days; amending s. 102.141, F.S.;
259requiring the canvassing board to report all early voting
260and all tabulated absentee results to the department by a
261time certain; requiring periodic updates; amending s.
262102.168, F.S.; revising provisions specifying
263indispensable parties in a contest of an election;
264providing that in an election contest involving the review
265of a signature on an absentee ballot by a canvassing
266board, a circuit court may not review or consider evidence
267other than the signature on the voter's certificate and
268the elector's signatures in the registration records;
269providing for the reversal of the determination by the
270canvassing board if the court determines that the board
271abused its discretion; amending s. 103.021, F.S.; revising
272a definition; creating s. 103.095, F.S.; providing a
273procedure for the registration of a minor political party;
274requiring the Division of Elections to adopt rules to
275prescribe the manner in which political parties may have
276their filings cancelled; amending s. 103.101, F.S.;
277creating a Presidential Preference Primary Date Selection
278Committee; providing membership; requiring for the
279committee to meet by a date certain and to set a date for
280the presidential preference primary; modifying timing
281requirements with respect to the number and selection of
282delegates for presidential preference primary candidates;
283deleting certain requirements governing party rules
284involving such delegates; amending s. 103.141, F.S.;
285revising procedures for the removal of an officer, county
286committeeman, county committeewoman, precinct
287committeeman, precinct committeewoman, or member of a
288county executive committee; repealing s. 103.161, F.S.,
289which relates to the removal or suspension of officers or
290members of a state or county executive committee; amending
291s. 104.29, F.S.; revising provisions authorizing persons
292to view whether ballots are being correctly reconciled;
293amending s. 105.031, F.S.; revising the oath for
294candidates for judicial office; amending s. 106.011, F.S.;
295revising the definitions of the terms "contribution,"
296"independent expenditure," "unopposed candidate," and
297"candidate"; conforming a cross-reference to changes made
298by the act; amending s. 106.021, F.S.; deleting
299requirements to report the address of certain persons
300receiving a reimbursement by a check drawn on a campaign
301account; amending s. 106.022, F.S.; requiring a political
302committee, committee of continuous existence, or
303electioneering communications organization to file a
304statement of appointment with the filing officer rather
305than with the Division of Elections; authorizing an entity
306to change its appointment of registered agent or
307registered office by filing a written statement with the
308filing officer; requiring a registered agent who resigns
309to execute a written statement of resignation and file it
310with the filing officer; amending s. 106.023, F.S.;
311revising the form of the statement of candidate to require
312a candidate to acknowledge that he or she has been
313provided access to and understands the requirements of ch.
314106, F.S.; amending s. 106.025, F.S.; exempting tickets or
315advertising for a campaign fundraiser from requirements of
316s. 106.143, F.S.; amending s. 106.03, F.S.; revising
317requirements for groups making expenditures for
318electioneering communications to file a statement of
319organization; amending s. 106.04, F.S.; transferring a
320requirement that certain committees of continuous
321existence file campaign finance reports in special
322elections; subjecting a committee of continuous existence
323that fails to file a report or to timely file a report
324with the Division of Elections or a county or municipal
325filing officer to a fine; requiring a committee of
326continuous existence to include transaction information
327from credit card purchases in a report filed with the
328Division of Elections; requiring a committee of continuous
329existence to report changes in information previously
330reported to the Division of Elections within 10 days after
331the change; requiring the Division of Elections to revoke
332the certification of a committee of continuous existence
333that fails to file or report certain information;
334requiring the division to adopt rules to prescribe the
335manner in which the certification is revoked; increasing
336the amount of a fine to be levied on a committee of
337continuous existence that fails to timely file certain
338reports; providing for the deposit of the proceeds of the
339fines; including the registered agent of a committee of
340continuous existence as a person whom the filing officer
341may notify that a report has not been filed; providing
342criteria for deeming delivery complete of a notice of
343fine; requiring a committee of continuous existence that
344appeals a fine to provide a copy of the appeal with the
345filing officer; amending s. 106.07, F.S.; creating an
346exception for reports due in the third calendar quarter
347immediately preceding a general election from a
348requirement that the campaign treasurer report
349contributions received and expenditures made on the 10th
350day following the end of each calendar quarter; revising
351reporting requirements for a statewide candidate who
352receives funding under the Florida Election Campaign
353Financing Act and candidates in a race with a candidate
354who has requested funding under that act; deleting a
355requirement for a committee of continuous existence to
356file a campaign treasurer's report relating to
357contributions or expenditures to influence the results of
358a special election; revising the methods by which a
359campaign treasurer may be notified of the determination
360that a report is incomplete to include certified mail and
361other methods using a common carrier that provides proof
362of delivery of the notice; extending the time the campaign
363treasurer has to file an addendum to the report after
364receipt of notice of why the report is incomplete;
365providing criteria for deeming delivery complete of a
366notice of incomplete report; deleting a provision allowing
367for notification by telephone of an incomplete report;
368revising the information that must be included in a report
369to include transaction information for credit card
370purchases; deleting a requirement for a campaign
371depository to return checks drawn on the account to the
372campaign treasurer; specifying the amount of a fine for
373the failure to timely file reports after a special primary
374election or special election; specifying that the
375registered agent of a political committee is a person whom
376a filing officer may notify of the amount of the fine for
377filing a late report; providing criteria for deeming
378delivery complete of a notice of late report and resulting
379fine; amending s. 106.0703, F.S.; deleting a requirement
380that an electioneering communications organization file
381electronically file certain periodic reports with the
382Department of State; amending s. 106.0705, F.S.; requiring
383certain individuals to electronically file certain reports
384with the Division of Elections; conforming a cross-
385reference to changes made by the act; deleting an obsolete
386provision; amending s. 106.08, F.S.; deleting a
387requirement for the Department of State to notify
388candidates as to whether an independent or minor party
389candidate has obtained the required number of petition
390signatures; deleting a requirement for certain unopposed
391candidates to return contributions; specifying the
392entities with which a political party's state executive
393committee and county executive committees and affiliated
394party committees must file a written acceptance of an in-
395kind contribution; amending s. 106.09, F.S.; specifying
396that the limitations on contributions by cash or cashier's
397check apply to the aggregate amount of contributions to a
398candidate or committee per election; amending s. 106.11,
399F.S.; revising the statement that must be contained on
400checks from a campaign account; deleting requirements
401relating to the use of debit cards; authorizing a campaign
402for a candidate to reimburse the candidate's loan to the
403campaign when the campaign account has sufficient funds;
404amending s. 106.141, F.S.; deleting a limit on the amount
405of surplus funds that a candidate may give to his or her
406political party; requiring candidates receiving public
407financing to return all surplus funds to the General
408Revenue Fund after paying certain monetary obligations and
409expenses; amending s. 106.143, F.S.; specifying disclosure
410statements that must be included in political
411advertisements paid for by a write-in candidate; revising
412the disclosure statements that must be included in certain
413political advertisements; clarifying the type of political
414advertisements that must be approved in advance by a
415candidate; deleting an exemption from the requirement to
416obtain a candidate's approval for messages designed to be
417worn; authorizing a disclaimer for paid political
418advertisements to contain certain registered names and
419abbreviations; amending s. 106.1437, F.S.; providing that
420expenditures for a miscellaneous advertisement are not
421considered to be a contribution to or on behalf of a
422candidate and do not constitute an independent
423expenditure; amending s. 106.17, F.S.; providing that the
424cost of certain polls are not contributions to a
425candidate; amending s. 106.19, F.S.; providing that a
426candidate's failure to comply with ch. 106, F.S., has no
427effect on whether the candidate has qualified for office;
428amending s. 106.25, F.S.; authorizing a person who is the
429subject of a complaint filed with the Florida Elections
430Commission to file a response before the executive
431director of the commission determines whether the
432complaint is legally sufficient; prohibiting the
433commission from determining by rule what constitutes
434willfulness or defining the term "willful"; authorizing
435the commission to enter into consent orders without
436requiring the respondent to admit to a violation of law;
437authorizing an administrative law judge to impose civil
438penalties for violations of ch. 104 or ch. 106, F.S.;
439amending s. 106.26, F.S.; requiring the commission to
440enforce certain witness subpoenas in the circuit court
441where the witness resides; amending s. 106.265, F.S.;
442authorizing an administrative law judge to assess civil
443penalties upon a finding of a violation of the election
444code or campaign financing laws; providing for civil
445penalties to be assessed against an electioneering
446communications organization; removing reference to the
447expired Election Campaign Financing Trust Fund; directing
448that moneys from penalties and fines be deposited into the
449General Revenue Fund; amending s. 106.29, F.S.; creating
450an exemption from state reporting requirements for certain
451contributions and expenditures by political parties;
452requiring state and county executive committees and
453affiliated party committees that make contributions or
454expenditures to influence the results of a special
455election or special primary election to file campaign
456treasurer's reports; amending campaign finance reporting
457dates, to conform; deleting a requirement that each state
458executive committee file the original and one copy of its
459reports with the Division of Elections; revising the due
460date for filing a report; providing criteria for deeming
461delivery complete of a notice of fine; amending s. 106.35,
462F.S.; deleting a requirement that the Division of Election
463adopt rules relating to the format and filing of certain
464printed campaign treasurer's reports; amending s. 112.312,
465F.S.; excluding contributions or expenditures reported
466pursuant to federal election law from the definition of
467the term "gift"; amending s. 112.3215, F.S.; excluding
468contributions or expenditures reported pursuant to federal
469election law from the definition of the term
470"expenditure"; amending s. 876.05, F.S.; deleting a
471requirement for all candidates for public office to record
472an oath to support the Constitution of the United States
473and of the State of Florida; repealing s. 876.07, F.S.,
474relating to a requirement that a person make an oath to
475support the Constitution of the United States and of the
476State of Florida in order to be qualified as a candidate
477for office; providing for severability of the act;
478providing effective dates.
479
480Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
481
482     Section 1.  Subsection (16) is added to section 97.012,
483Florida Statutes, to read:
484     97.012  Secretary of State as chief election officer.-The
485Secretary of State is the chief election officer of the state,
486and it is his or her responsibility to:
487     (16)  Provide written direction and opinions to the
488supervisors of elections on the performance of their official
489duties with respect to the Florida Election Code or rules
490adopted by the Department of State.
491     Section 2.  Subsection (18) of section 97.021, Florida
492Statutes, is amended to read:
493     97.021  Definitions.-For the purposes of this code, except
494where the context clearly indicates otherwise, the term:
495     (18)  "Minor political party" is any group as specified
496defined in s. 103.095 this subsection which on January 1
497preceding a primary election does not have registered as members
4985 percent of the total registered electors of the state. Any
499group of citizens organized for the general purposes of electing
500to office qualified persons and determining public issues under
501the democratic processes of the United States may become a minor
502political party of this state by filing with the department a
503certificate showing the name of the organization, the names of
504its current officers, including the members of its executive
505committee, and a copy of its constitution or bylaws. It shall be
506the duty of the minor political party to notify the department
507of any changes in the filing certificate within 5 days of such
508changes.
509     Section 3.  Section 97.025, Florida Statutes, is amended to
510read:
511     97.025  Election Code; copies thereof.-A pamphlet of a
512reprint of the Election Code, adequately indexed, shall be
513prepared by the Department of State. The pamphlet shall be made
514available It shall have a sufficient number of these pamphlets
515printed so that one may be given, upon request, to each
516candidate who qualifies with the department. The pamphlet shall
517be made available A sufficient number may be sent to each
518supervisor, prior to the first day of qualifying, so that for
519distribution, upon request, to each candidate who qualifies with
520the supervisor and to each clerk of elections have access to the
521pamphlet. The cost of making printing the pamphlets available
522shall be paid out of funds appropriated for conducting
523elections.
524     Section 4.  Section 97.0575, Florida Statutes, is amended
525to read:
526     97.0575  Third-party voter registrations.-
527     (1)  Before engaging in any voter registration activities,
528a third-party voter registration organization must register and
529provide to the division, in an electronic format, the following
530information:
531     (a)  The names of the officers of the organization and the
532name and permanent address of the organization.
533     (b)  The name and address of the organization's registered
534agent in the state.
535     (c)  The names, permanent addresses, and temporary
536addresses, if any, of each registration agent registering
537persons to vote in this state on behalf of the organization.
538     (d)  A sworn statement from each registration agent
539employed by or volunteering for the organization stating that
540the agent will obey all state laws and rules regarding the
541registration of voters. Such statement must be on a form
542containing notice of applicable penalties for false
543registration.
544     (2)  The division or the supervisor of elections shall make
545voter registration forms available to third-party voter
546registration organizations. All such forms must contain
547information identifying the organization to which the forms are
548provided. The division shall maintain a database of all third-
549party voter registration organizations and the voter
550registration forms assigned to the third-party voter
551registration organization. Each supervisor of elections shall
552provide to the division information on voter registration forms
553assigned to and received from third-party voter registration
554organizations. The information must be provided in a format and
555at times as required by the division by rule. The division must
556update information on third-party voter registrations daily and
557make the information publicly available.
558     (1)  Prior to engaging in any voter registration
559activities, a third-party voter registration organization shall
560name a registered agent in the state and submit to the division,
561in a form adopted by the division, the name of the registered
562agent and the name of those individuals responsible for the day-
563to-day operation of the third-party voter registration
564organization, including, if applicable, the names of the
565entity's board of directors, president, vice president, managing
566partner, or such other individuals engaged in similar duties or
567functions. On or before the 15th day after the end of each
568calendar quarter, each third-party voter registration
569organization shall submit to the division a report providing the
570date and location of any organized voter registration drives
571conducted by the organization in the prior calendar quarter.
572     (2)  The failure to submit the information required by
573subsection (1) does not subject the third-party voter
574registration organization to any civil or criminal penalties for
575such failure, and the failure to submit such information is not
576a basis for denying such third-party voter registration
577organization with copies of voter registration application
578forms.
579     (3)(a)  A third-party voter registration organization that
580collects voter registration applications serves as a fiduciary
581to the applicant, ensuring that any voter registration
582application entrusted to the third-party voter registration
583organization, irrespective of party affiliation, race,
584ethnicity, or gender, shall be promptly delivered to the
585division or the supervisor of elections within 48 hours after
586the applicant completes it or the next business day if the
587appropriate office is closed for that 48-hour period. If a voter
588registration application collected by any third-party voter
589registration organization is not promptly delivered to the
590division or supervisor of elections, the third-party voter
591registration organization is shall be liable for the following
592fines:
593     1.(a)  A fine in the amount of $50 for each application
594received by the division or the supervisor of elections more
595than 48 hours 10 days after the applicant delivered the
596completed voter registration application to the third-party
597voter registration organization or any person, entity, or agent
598acting on its behalf or the next business day, if the office is
599closed. A fine in the amount of $250 for each application
600received if the third-party voter registration organization or
601person, entity, or agency acting on its behalf acted willfully.
602     2.(b)  A fine in the amount of $100 for each application
603collected by a third-party voter registration organization or
604any person, entity, or agent acting on its behalf, before prior
605to book closing for any given election for federal or state
606office and received by the division or the supervisor of
607elections after the book-closing book closing deadline for such
608election. A fine in the amount of $500 for each application
609received if the third-party registration organization or person,
610entity, or agency acting on its behalf acted willfully.
611     3.(c)  A fine in the amount of $500 for each application
612collected by a third-party voter registration organization or
613any person, entity, or agent acting on its behalf, which is not
614submitted to the division or supervisor of elections. A fine in
615the amount of $1,000 for any application not submitted if the
616third-party voter registration organization or person, entity,
617or agency acting on its behalf acted willfully.
618
619The aggregate fine pursuant to this paragraph subsection which
620may be assessed against a third-party voter registration
621organization, including affiliate organizations, for violations
622committed in a calendar year is shall be $1,000.
623     (b)  A showing by the fines provided in this subsection
624shall be reduced by three-fourths in cases in which the third-
625party voter registration organization that the failure to
626deliver the voter registration application within the required
627timeframe is based upon force majeure or impossibility of
628performance shall be an affirmative defense to a violation of
629this subsection has complied with subsection (1). The secretary
630may shall waive the fines described in this subsection upon a
631showing that the failure to deliver the voter registration
632application promptly is based upon force majeure or
633impossibility of performance.
634     (4)  If the Secretary of State reasonably believes that a
635person has committed a violation of this section, the secretary
636may refer the matter to the Attorney General for enforcement.
637The Attorney General may institute a civil action for a
638violation of this section or to prevent a violation of this
639section. An action for relief may include a permanent or
640temporary injunction, a restraining order, or any other
641appropriate order.
642     (5)(4)(a)  The division shall adopt by rule a form to
643elicit specific information concerning the facts and
644circumstances from a person who claims to have been registered
645to vote by a third-party voter registration organization but who
646does not appear as an active voter on the voter registration
647rolls. The division shall also adopt rules to ensure the
648integrity of the registration process, including rules requiring
649third-party voter registration organizations to account for all
650state and federal registration forms used by their registration
651agents. Such rules may require an organization to provide
652organization and form specific identification information on
653each form as determined by the department as needed to assist in
654the accounting of state and federal registration forms.
655     (b)  The division may investigate any violation of this
656section. Civil fines shall be assessed by the division and
657enforced through any appropriate legal proceedings.
658     (6)(5)  The date on which an applicant signs a voter
659registration application is presumed to be the date on which the
660third-party voter registration organization received or
661collected the voter registration application.
662     (7)  The requirements of this section are retroactive for
663any third-party voter registration organization registered with
664the department on the effective date of this act, and must be
665complied with within 90 days after the department provides
666notice to the third-party voter registration organization of the
667requirements contained in this section. Failure of the third-
668party voter registration organization to comply with the
669requirements within 90 days after receipt of the notice shall
670automatically result in the cancellation of the third-party
671voter registration organization's registration.
672     (6)  The civil fines provided in this section are in
673addition to any applicable criminal penalties.
674     (7)  Fines collected pursuant to this section shall be
675annually appropriated by the Legislature to the department for
676enforcement of this section and for voter education.
677     (8)  The division may adopt rules to administer this
678section.
679     Section 5.  Section 97.071, Florida Statutes, is amended to
680read:
681     97.071  Voter information card.-
682     (1)  A voter information card shall be furnished by the
683supervisor to all registered voters residing in the supervisor's
684county. The card must contain:
685     (a)  Voter's registration number.
686     (b)  Date of registration.
687     (c)  Full name.
688     (d)  Party affiliation.
689     (e)  Date of birth.
690     (f)  Address of legal residence.
691     (g)  Precinct number.
692     (h)  Polling place address.
693     (i)(h)  Name of supervisor and contact information of
694supervisor.
695     (j)(i)  Other information deemed necessary by the
696supervisor.
697     (2)  A voter may receive a replacement voter information
698card by providing a signed, written request for a replacement
699card to a voter registration official. Upon verification of
700registration, the supervisor shall issue the voter a duplicate
701card without charge.
702     (3)  In the case of a change of name, address of legal
703residence, polling place address, or party affiliation, the
704supervisor shall issue the voter a new voter information card.
705     Section 6.  The supervisor must meet the requirements of
706section 5 of this act for any elector who registers to vote or
707who is issued a new voter information card pursuant to s.
70897.071(2) or (3), Florida Statutes, on or after August 1, 2012.
709     Section 7.  Subsection (1) of section 97.073, Florida
710Statutes, is amended to read:
711     97.073  Disposition of voter registration applications;
712cancellation notice.-
713     (1)  The supervisor must notify each applicant of the
714disposition of the applicant's voter registration application
715within 5 business days after voter registration information is
716entered into the statewide voter registration system. The notice
717must inform the applicant that the application has been
718approved, is incomplete, has been denied, or is a duplicate of a
719current registration. A voter information card sent to an
720applicant constitutes notice of approval of registration. If the
721application is incomplete, the supervisor must request that the
722applicant supply the missing information using a voter
723registration application signed by the applicant. A notice of
724denial must inform the applicant of the reason the application
725was denied.
726     Section 8.  Subsections (1) and (2) of section 97.1031,
727Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
728     97.1031 Notice of change of residence, change of name, or
729change of party affiliation.-
730     (1)(a) When an elector changes his or her residence
731address, the elector must notify the supervisor of elections.
732Except as provided in paragraph (b), an address change must be
733submitted using a voter registration application.
734     (b)  If the address change is within the state and notice
735is provided to the supervisor of elections of the county where
736the elector has moved, the elector may do so by:
737     1.  Contacting the supervisor of elections via telephone or
738electronic means, in which case the elector must provide his or
739her date of birth; or
740     2.  Submitting the change on a voter registration
741application or other signed written notice. moves from the
742address named on that person's voter registration record to
743another address within the same county, the elector must provide
744notification of such move to the supervisor of elections of that
745county. The elector may provide the supervisor a signed, written
746notice or may notify the supervisor by telephone or electronic
747means. However, notification of such move other than by signed,
748written notice must include the elector's date of birth. An
749elector may also provide notification to other voter
750registration officials as provided in subsection (2). A voter
751information card reflecting the new information shall be issued
752to the elector as provided in subsection (3).
753     (2)  When an elector moves from the address named on that
754person's voter registration record to another address in a
755different county but within the state, the elector seeks to
756change party affiliation, or the name of an elector is changed
757by marriage or other legal process, the elector shall notify his
758or her supervisor of elections or other provide notice of such
759change to a voter registration official by using a voter
760registration application signed written notice that contains the
761elector's date of birth or voter registration number by the
762elector. When an elector changes his or her name by marriage or
763other legal process, the elector shall notify his or her
764supervisor of elections or other voter registration official by
765using a signed written notice that contains the elector's date
766of birth or voter's registration number. A voter information
767card reflecting the new information shall be issued to the
768elector as provided in subsection (3).
769     Section 9.  Subsections (3) and (6) of section 98.075,
770Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
771     98.075  Registration records maintenance activities;
772ineligibility determinations.-
773     (3)  DECEASED PERSONS.-
774     (a)1.  The department shall identify those registered
775voters who are deceased by comparing information on the lists of
776deceased persons received from either:
777     a.  The Department of Health as provided in s. 98.093; or.
778     b.  The United States Social Security Administration,
779including, but not limited to, any master death file or index
780compiled by the United States Social Security Administration.
781     2.  Within 7 days after Upon receipt of such information
782through the statewide voter registration system, the supervisor
783shall remove the name of the registered voter.
784     (b)  The supervisor shall remove the name of a deceased
785registered voter from the statewide voter registration system
786upon receipt of a copy of a death certificate issued by a
787governmental agency authorized to issue death certificates.
788     (6)  OTHER BASES FOR INELIGIBILITY.-If the department or
789supervisor receives information other than from the sources
790other than those identified in subsections (2)-(5) that a
791registered voter is ineligible because he or she is deceased,
792adjudicated a convicted felon without having had his or her
793civil rights restored, adjudicated mentally incapacitated
794without having had his or her voting rights restored, does not
795meet the age requirement pursuant to s. 97.041, is not a United
796States citizen, is a fictitious person, or has listed a
797residence that is not his or her legal residence, the supervisor
798must shall adhere to the procedures set forth in subsection (7)
799prior to the removal of a registered voter's name from the
800statewide voter registration system.
801     Section 10.  Section 98.093, Florida Statutes, is amended
802to read:
803     98.093  Duty of officials to furnish information relating
804to lists of deceased persons, persons adjudicated mentally
805incapacitated, and persons convicted of a felony.-
806     (1)  In order to identify ineligible registered voters and
807maintain ensure the maintenance of accurate and current voter
808registration records in the statewide voter registration system
809pursuant to procedures in s. 98.065 or s. 98.075, it is
810necessary for the department and supervisors of elections to
811receive or access certain information from state and federal
812officials and entities in the format prescribed. The department
813and supervisors of elections shall use the information provided
814from the sources in subsection (2) to maintain the voter
815registration records.
816     (2)  To the maximum extent feasible, state and local
817government agencies shall facilitate provision of information
818and access to data to the department, including, but not limited
819to, databases that contain reliable criminal records and records
820of deceased persons. State and local government agencies that
821provide such data shall do so without charge if the direct cost
822incurred by those agencies is not significant.
823     (a)  The Department of Health shall furnish monthly to the
824department a list containing the name, address, date of birth,
825date of death, social security number, race, and sex of each
826deceased person 17 years of age or older.
827     (b)  Each clerk of the circuit court shall furnish monthly
828to the department a list of those persons who have been
829adjudicated mentally incapacitated with respect to voting during
830the preceding calendar month, a list of those persons whose
831mental capacity with respect to voting has been restored during
832the preceding calendar month, and a list of those persons who
833have returned signed jury notices during the preceding months to
834the clerk of the circuit court indicating a change of address.
835Each list shall include the name, address, date of birth, race,
836sex, and, whichever is available, the Florida driver's license
837number, Florida identification card number, or social security
838number of each such person.
839     (c)  Upon receipt of information from the United States
840Attorney, listing persons convicted of a felony in federal
841court, the department shall use such information to identify
842registered voters or applicants for voter registration who may
843be potentially ineligible based on information provided in
844accordance with s. 98.075.
845     (d)  The Department of Law Enforcement shall identify those
846persons who have been convicted of a felony who appear in the
847voter registration records supplied by the statewide voter
848registration system, in a time and manner that enables the
849department to meet its obligations under state and federal law.
850     (e)  The Florida Parole Commission Board of Executive
851Clemency shall furnish at least bimonthly monthly to the
852department data, including the identity a list of those persons
853granted clemency in the preceding month or any updates to prior
854records which have occurred in the preceding month. The data
855list shall contain the commission's Board of Executive Clemency
856case number and the person's, name, address, date of birth,
857race, gender sex, Florida driver's license number, Florida
858identification card number, or the last four digits of the
859social security number, if available, and references to record
860identifiers assigned by the Department of Corrections and the
861Department of Law Enforcement, a unique identifier of each
862clemency case, and the effective date of clemency of each
863person.
864     (f)  The Department of Corrections shall identify those
865persons who have been convicted of a felony and committed to its
866custody or placed on community supervision. The information must
867be provided to the department at a time and in manner that
868enables the department to identify registered voters who are
869convicted felons and to meet its obligations under state and
870federal law. furnish monthly to the department a list of those
871persons transferred to the Department of Corrections in the
872preceding month or any updates to prior records which have
873occurred in the preceding month. The list shall contain the
874name, address, date of birth, race, sex, social security number,
875Department of Corrections record identification number, and
876associated Department of Law Enforcement felony conviction
877record number of each person.
878     (g)  The Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
879shall furnish monthly to the department a list of those persons
880whose names have been removed from the driver's license database
881because they have been licensed in another state. The list shall
882contain the name, address, date of birth, sex, social security
883number, and driver's license number of each such person.
884     (3)  Nothing in This section does not shall limit or
885restrict the supervisor in his or her duty to remove the names
886of persons from the statewide voter registration system pursuant
887to s. 98.075(7) based upon information received from other
888sources.
889     Section 11.  Effective July 1, 2012, subsections (1) and
890(2) of section 98.0981, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
891     98.0981  Reports; voting history; statewide voter
892registration system information; precinct-level election
893results; book closing statistics.-
894     (1)  VOTING HISTORY AND STATEWIDE VOTER REGISTRATION SYSTEM
895INFORMATION.-
896     (a)  Within 30 45 days after certification by the Elections
897Canvassing Commission of a presidential preference primary,
898special election, primary election, or a general election,
899supervisors of elections shall transmit to the department, in a
900uniform electronic format specified in paragraph (d) by the
901department, completely updated voting history information for
902each qualified voter who voted.
903     (b)  After receipt of the information in paragraph (a), the
904department shall prepare a report in electronic format which
905contains the following information, separately compiled for the
906primary and general election for all voters qualified to vote in
907either election:
908     1.  The unique identifier assigned to each qualified voter
909within the statewide voter registration system;
910     2.  All information provided by each qualified voter on his
911or her voter registration application pursuant to s. 97.052(2),
912except that which is confidential or exempt from public records
913requirements;
914     3.  Each qualified voter's date of registration;
915     4.  Each qualified voter's current state representative
916district, state senatorial district, and congressional district,
917assigned by the supervisor of elections;
918     5.  Each qualified voter's current precinct; and
919     6.  Voting history as transmitted under paragraph (a) to
920include whether the qualified voter voted at a precinct
921location, voted during the early voting period, voted by
922absentee ballot, attempted to vote by absentee ballot that was
923not counted, attempted to vote by provisional ballot that was
924not counted, or did not vote.
925     (c)  Within 45 60 days after certification by the Elections
926Canvassing Commission of a presidential preference primary,
927special election, primary election, or a general election, the
928department shall send to the President of the Senate, the
929Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Senate Minority
930Leader, and the House Minority Leader a report in electronic
931format that includes all information set forth in paragraph (b).
932     (d)  File specifications are as follows:
933     1.  The file shall contain records designated by the
934categories below for all qualified voters who, regardless of the
935voter's county of residence or active or inactive registration
936status at the book closing for the corresponding election that
937the file is being created for:
938     a.  Voted a regular ballot at a precinct location.
939     b.  Voted at a precinct location using a provisional ballot
940that was subsequently counted.
941     c.  Voted a regular ballot during the early voting period.
942     d.  Voted during the early voting period using a
943provisional ballot that was subsequently counted.
944     e.  Voted by absentee ballot.
945     f.  Attempted to vote by absentee ballot, but the ballot
946was not counted.
947     g.  Attempted to vote by provisional ballot, but the ballot
948was not counted in that election.
949     2.  Each file shall be created or converted into a tab-
950delimited format.
951     3.  File names shall adhere to the following convention:
952     a.  Three-character county identifier as established by the
953department followed by an underscore.
954     b.  Followed by four-character file type identifier of
955'VH03' followed by an underscore.
956     c.  Followed by FVRS election ID followed by an underscore.
957     d.  Followed by Date Created followed by an underscore.
958     e.  Date format is YYYYMMDD.
959     f.  Followed by Time Created - HHMMSS.
960     g.  Followed by ".txt".
961     4.  Each record shall contain the following columns: Record
962Identifier, FVRS Voter ID Number, FVRS Election ID Number, Vote
963Date, Vote History Code, Precinct, Congressional District, House
964District, Senate District, County Commission District, and
965School Board District.
966     (e)  Each supervisor of elections shall reconcile, before
967submission, the aggregate total of ballots cast in each precinct
968as reported in the precinct-level election results to the
969aggregate total number of voters with voter history for the
970election for each district.
971     (f)  Each supervisor of elections shall submit the results
972of the data reconciliation as described in paragraph (e) to the
973department in an electronic format and give a written
974explanation for any precincts where the reconciliation as
975described in paragraph (e) results in a discrepancy between the
976voter history and the election results.
977     (2)(a)  PRECINCT-LEVEL ELECTION RESULTS.-Within 30 45 days
978after certification by the Elections Canvassing Commission the
979date of a presidential preference primary election, a special
980election, primary election, or a general election, the
981supervisors of elections shall collect and submit to the
982department precinct-level election results for the election in a
983uniform electronic format specified by paragraph (c) the
984department. The precinct-level election results shall be
985compiled separately for the primary or special primary election
986that preceded the general or special general election,
987respectively. The results shall specifically include for each
988precinct the aggregate total of all ballots cast for each
989candidate or nominee to fill a national, state, county, or
990district office or proposed constitutional amendment, with
991subtotals for each candidate and ballot type, unless fewer than
99210 voters voted a ballot type. "All ballots cast" means ballots
993cast by voters who cast a ballot whether at a precinct location,
994by absentee ballot including overseas absentee ballots, during
995the early voting period, or by provisional ballot.
996     (b)  The department shall make such information available
997on a searchable, sortable, and downloadable database via its
998website that also includes the file layout and codes. The
999database shall be searchable and sortable by county, precinct,
1000and candidate. The database shall be downloadable in a tab-
1001delimited format. The database shall be available for download
1002county-by-county and also as a statewide file. Such report shall
1003also be made available upon request.
1004     (c)  The files containing the precinct-level election
1005results shall be created in accordance with the applicable file
1006specification:
1007     1.  The precinct-level results file shall be created or
1008converted into a tab-delimited text file.
1009     2.  The row immediately before the first data record shall
1010contain the column names of the data elements that make up the
1011data records. There shall be one header record followed by
1012multiple data records.
1013     3.  The data records shall include the following columns:
1014County Name, Election Number, Election Date, Unique Precinct
1015Identifier, Precinct Polling Location, Total Registered Voters,
1016Total Registered Republicans, Total Registered Democrats, Total
1017Registered All Other Parties, Contest Name,
1018Candidate/Retention/Issue Name, Candidate Florida Voter
1019Registration System ID Number, Division of Elections Unique
1020Candidate Identifying Number, Candidate Party, District,
1021Undervote Total, Overvote Total, Write-in Total, and Vote Total.
1022     Section 12.  Subsections (5) and (7) of section 99.012,
1023Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
1024     99.012  Restrictions on individuals qualifying for public
1025office.-
1026     (5)  If an order of a court that has become final
1027determines that a person did not comply with this section, the
1028person shall not be qualified as a candidate for election and
1029his or her name may not appear on the ballot. The name of any
1030person who does not comply with this section may be removed from
1031every ballot on which it appears when ordered by a circuit court
1032upon the petition of an elector or the Department of State.
1033     (7)  Nothing contained in subsection (3) relates to persons
1034holding any federal office or seeking the office of President or
1035Vice President.
1036     Section 13.  Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1) of
1037section 99.021, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection
1038(3) is added to that section, to read:
1039     99.021  Form of candidate oath.-
1040     (1)(a)1.  Each candidate, whether a party candidate, a
1041candidate with no party affiliation, or a write-in candidate, in
1042order to qualify for nomination or election to any office other
1043than a judicial office as defined in chapter 105 or a federal
1044office, shall take and subscribe to an oath or affirmation in
1045writing. A printed copy of the oath or affirmation shall be made
1046available furnished to the candidate by the officer before whom
1047such candidate seeks to qualify and shall be substantially in
1048the following form:
1049
1050State of Florida
1051County of....
1052     Before me, an officer authorized to administer oaths,
1053personally appeared ...(please print name as you wish it to
1054appear on the ballot)..., to me well known, who, being sworn,
1055says that he or she is a candidate for the office of ....; that
1056he or she is a qualified elector of .... County, Florida; that
1057he or she is qualified under the Constitution and the laws of
1058Florida to hold the office to which he or she desires to be
1059nominated or elected; that he or she has taken the oath required
1060by ss. 876.05-876.10, Florida Statutes; that he or she has
1061qualified for no other public office in the state, the term of
1062which office or any part thereof runs concurrent with that of
1063the office he or she seeks; and that he or she has resigned from
1064any office from which he or she is required to resign pursuant
1065to s. 99.012, Florida Statutes; and that he or she will support
1066the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of
1067the State of Florida.
1068...(Signature of candidate)...
1069...(Address)...
1070Sworn to and subscribed before me this .... day of ....,
1071...(year)..., at .... County, Florida.
1072...(Signature and title of officer administering oath)...
1073
1074     2.  Each candidate for federal office, whether a party
1075candidate, a candidate with no party affiliation, or a write-in
1076candidate, in order to qualify for nomination or election to
1077office shall take and subscribe to an oath or affirmation in
1078writing. A printed copy of the oath or affirmation shall be made
1079available furnished to the candidate by the officer before whom
1080such candidate seeks to qualify and shall be substantially in
1081the following form:
1082
1083State of Florida
1084County of ....
1085     Before me, an officer authorized to administer oaths,
1086personally appeared ...(please print name as you wish it to
1087appear on the ballot)..., to me well known, who, being sworn,
1088says that he or she is a candidate for the office of ....; that
1089he or she is qualified under the Constitution and laws of the
1090United States to hold the office to which he or she desires to
1091be nominated or elected; and that he or she has qualified for no
1092other public office in the state, the term of which office or
1093any part thereof runs concurrent with that of the office he or
1094she seeks; and that he or she will support the Constitution of
1095the United States.
1096...(Signature of candidate)...
1097...(Address)...
1098
1099Sworn to and subscribed before me this .... day of ....,
1100...(year)..., at .... County, Florida.
1101...(Signature and title of officer administering oath)...
1102
1103     (b)  In addition, any person seeking to qualify for
1104nomination as a candidate of any political party shall, at the
1105time of subscribing to the oath or affirmation, state in
1106writing:
1107     1.  The party of which the person is a member.
1108     2.  That the person is not a registered member of any other
1109political party and has not been a registered member of
1110candidate for nomination for any other political party for 365
1111days before the beginning of qualifying for a period of 6 months
1112preceding the general election for which the person seeks to
1113qualify.
1114     3.  That the person has paid the assessment levied against
1115him or her, if any, as a candidate for said office by the
1116executive committee of the party of which he or she is a member.
1117     (3)  This section does not apply to a person who seeks to
1118qualify for election pursuant to ss. 103.021 and 103.101.
1119     Section 14.  Subsections (5) and (7) of section 99.061,
1120Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (11) is added to
1121that section, to read:
1122     99.061  Method of qualifying for nomination or election to
1123federal, state, county, or district office.-
1124     (5)  At the time of qualifying for office, each candidate
1125for a constitutional office shall file a full and public
1126disclosure of financial interests pursuant to s. 8, Art. II of
1127the State Constitution, which must be verified under oath or
1128affirmation pursuant to s. 92.525(1)(a), and a candidate for any
1129other office, including local elective office, shall file a
1130statement of financial interests pursuant to s. 112.3145.
1131     (7)(a)  In order for a candidate to be qualified, the
1132following items must be received by the filing officer by the
1133end of the qualifying period:
1134     1.  A properly executed check drawn upon the candidate's
1135campaign account payable to the person or entity as prescribed
1136by the filing officer in an amount not less than the fee
1137required by s. 99.092, unless the candidate obtained the
1138required number of signatures on petitions or, in lieu thereof,
1139as applicable, the copy of the notice of obtaining ballot
1140position pursuant to s. 99.095. The filing fee for a special
1141district candidate is not required to be drawn upon the
1142candidate's campaign account. If a candidate's check is returned
1143by the bank for any reason, the filing officer shall immediately
1144notify the candidate and the candidate shall have until, the end
1145of qualifying notwithstanding, have 48 hours from the time such
1146notification is received, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and
1147legal holidays, to pay the fee with a cashier's check purchased
1148from funds of the campaign account. Failure to pay the fee as
1149provided in this subparagraph shall disqualify the candidate.
1150     2.  The candidate's oath required by s. 99.021, which must
1151contain the name of the candidate as it is to appear on the
1152ballot; the office sought, including the district or group
1153number if applicable; and the signature of the candidate, which
1154must be verified under oath or affirmation pursuant to s.
115592.525(1)(a) duly acknowledged.
1156     3.  The loyalty oath required by s. 876.05, signed by the
1157candidate and duly acknowledged.
1158     3.4.  If the office sought is partisan, the written
1159statement of political party affiliation required by s.
116099.021(1)(b).
1161     4.5.  The completed form for the appointment of campaign
1162treasurer and designation of campaign depository, as required by
1163s. 106.021.
1164     5.6.  The full and public disclosure or statement of
1165financial interests required by subsection (5). A public officer
1166who has filed the full and public disclosure or statement of
1167financial interests with the Commission on Ethics or the
1168supervisor of elections prior to qualifying for office may file
1169a copy of that disclosure at the time of qualifying.
1170     (b)  If the filing officer receives qualifying papers
1171during the qualifying period prescribed in this section which
1172that do not include all items as required by paragraph (a) prior
1173to the last day of qualifying, the filing officer shall make a
1174reasonable effort to notify the candidate of the missing or
1175incomplete items and shall inform the candidate that all
1176required items must be received by the close of qualifying. A
1177candidate's name as it is to appear on the ballot may not be
1178changed after the end of qualifying.
1179     (c)  The filing officer performs a ministerial function in
1180reviewing qualifying papers. In determining whether a candidate
1181is qualified, the filing officer shall review the qualifying
1182papers to determine whether all items required by paragraph (a)
1183have been properly filed and whether each item is complete on
1184its face, including whether items that must be verified have
1185been properly verified pursuant to s. 92.525(1)(a). The filing
1186officer may not determine whether the contents of the qualifying
1187papers are accurate.
1188     (11)  The decision of the filing officer concerning whether
1189a candidate is qualified is exempt from the provisions of
1190chapter 120.
1191     Section 15.  Subsection (2) of section 99.063, Florida
1192Statutes, is amended to read:
1193     99.063  Candidates for Governor and Lieutenant Governor.-
1194     (2)  No later than 5 p.m. of the 9th day following the
1195primary election, each designated candidate for Lieutenant
1196Governor shall file with the Department of State:
1197     (a)  The candidate's oath required by s. 99.021, which must
1198contain the name of the candidate as it is to appear on the
1199ballot; the office sought; and the signature of the candidate,
1200which must be verified under oath or affirmation pursuant to s.
120192.525(1)(a) duly acknowledged.
1202     (b)  The loyalty oath required by s. 876.05, signed by the
1203candidate and duly acknowledged.
1204     (b)(c)  If the office sought is partisan, the written
1205statement of political party affiliation required by s.
120699.021(1)(b).
1207     (c)(d)  The full and public disclosure of financial
1208interests pursuant to s. 8, Art. II of the State Constitution. A
1209public officer who has filed the full and public disclosure with
1210the Commission on Ethics prior to qualifying for office may file
1211a copy of that disclosure at the time of qualifying.
1212     Section 16.  Subsection (1) of section 99.092, Florida
1213Statutes, is amended to read:
1214     99.092  Qualifying fee of candidate; notification of
1215Department of State.-
1216     (1)  Each person seeking to qualify for nomination or
1217election to any office, except a person seeking to qualify by
1218the petition process pursuant to s. 99.095 and except a person
1219seeking to qualify as a write-in candidate, shall pay a
1220qualifying fee, which shall consist of a filing fee and election
1221assessment, to the officer with whom the person qualifies, and
1222any party assessment levied, and shall attach the original or
1223signed duplicate of the receipt for his or her party assessment
1224or pay the same, in accordance with the provisions of s.
1225103.121, at the time of filing his or her other qualifying
1226papers. The amount of the filing fee is 3 percent of the annual
1227salary of the office. The amount of the election assessment is 1
1228percent of the annual salary of the office sought. The election
1229assessment shall be deposited into the Clearing Funds Trust Fund
1230and transferred to the Elections Commission Trust Fund within
1231the Department of Legal Affairs. The amount of the party
1232assessment is 2 percent of the annual salary. The annual salary
1233of the office for purposes of computing the filing fee, election
1234assessment, and party assessment shall be computed by
1235multiplying 12 times the monthly salary, excluding any special
1236qualification pay, authorized for such office as of July 1
1237immediately preceding the first day of qualifying. No qualifying
1238fee shall be returned to the candidate unless the candidate
1239withdraws his or her candidacy before the last date to qualify.
1240If a candidate dies prior to an election and has not withdrawn
1241his or her candidacy before the last date to qualify, the
1242candidate's qualifying fee shall be returned to his or her
1243designated beneficiary, and, if the filing fee or any portion
1244thereof has been transferred to the political party of the
1245candidate, the Secretary of State shall direct the party to
1246return that portion to the designated beneficiary of the
1247candidate.
1248     Section 17.  Subsection (1) of section 99.093, Florida
1249Statutes, is amended to read:
1250     99.093  Municipal candidates; election assessment.-
1251     (1)  Each person seeking to qualify for nomination or
1252election to a municipal office shall pay, at the time of
1253qualifying for office, an election assessment. The election
1254assessment shall be an amount equal to 1 percent of the annual
1255salary of the office sought. Within 30 days after the close of
1256qualifying, the qualifying officer shall forward all assessments
1257collected pursuant to this section to the Florida Elections
1258Commission Department of State for deposit in transfer to the
1259Elections Commission Trust Fund within the Department of Legal
1260Affairs.
1261     Section 18.  Paragraph (d) is added to subsection (2) of
1262section 99.095, Florida Statutes, to read:
1263     99.095  Petition process in lieu of a qualifying fee and
1264party assessment.-
1265     (2)
1266     (d)  In a year of apportionment, any candidate for county
1267or district office seeking ballot position by the petition
1268process may obtain the required number of signatures from any
1269registered voter in the respective county, regardless of
1270district boundaries. The candidate shall obtain at least the
1271number of signatures equal to 1 percent of the total number of
1272registered voters, as shown by a compilation by the department
1273for the immediately preceding general election, divided by the
1274total number of districts of the office involved.
1275     Section 19.  Subsections (1), (3), and (5) of section
127699.097, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection (6) is
1277added to that section, to read:
1278     99.097  Verification of signatures on petitions.-
1279     (1)(a)  As determined by each supervisor, based upon local
1280conditions, the checking of names on petitions may be based on
1281the most inexpensive and administratively feasible of either of
1282the following methods of verification:
1283     1.(a)  A name-by-name, signature-by-signature check of each
1284petition the number of authorized signatures on the petitions;
1285or
1286     2.(b)  A check of a random sample, as provided by the
1287Department of State, of names and signatures on the petitions.
1288The sample must be such that a determination can be made as to
1289whether or not the required number of signatures has have been
1290obtained with a reliability of at least 99.5 percent.
1291     (b)  Rules and guidelines for this method of petition
1292verification shall be adopted promulgated by the Department of
1293State. Rules and guidelines for a random sample method of
1294verification, which may include a requirement that petitions
1295bear an additional number of names and signatures, not to exceed
129615 percent of the names and signatures otherwise required. If
1297the petitions do not meet such criteria or if the petitions are
1298prescribed by s. 100.371, then the use of the random sample
1299method of verification is method described in this paragraph
1300shall not be available to supervisors.
1301     (3)(a)  If all other requirements for the petition are met,
1302a signature on a petition shall be verified and counted as valid
1303for a registered voter if, after comparing the signature on the
1304petition and the signature of the registered voter in the voter
1305registration system, the supervisor is able to determine that
1306the petition signer is the same as the registered voter, even if
1307the name on the petition is not in substantially the same form
1308as in the voter registration system. A name on a petition, which
1309name is not in substantially the same form as a name on the
1310voter registration books, shall be counted as a valid signature
1311if, after comparing the signature on the petition with the
1312signature of the alleged signer as shown on the registration
1313books, the supervisor determines that the person signing the
1314petition and the person who registered to vote are one and the
1315same.
1316     (b)  In any situation in which this code requires the form
1317of the petition to be prescribed by the division, no signature
1318shall be counted toward the number of signatures required unless
1319it is on a petition form prescribed by the division.
1320     (c)(b)  If a voter signs a petition and lists an address
1321other than the legal residence where the voter is registered,
1322the supervisor shall treat the signature as if the voter had
1323listed the address where the voter is registered.
1324     (5)  The results of a verification pursuant to subparagraph
1325(1)(a)2. paragraph (1)(b) may be contested in the circuit court
1326by the candidate; an announced opponent; a representative of a
1327designated political committee; or a person, party, or other
1328organization submitting the petition. The contestant shall file
1329a complaint, together with the fees prescribed in chapter 28,
1330with the clerk of the circuit court in the county in which the
1331petition is certified or in Leon County if the petition covers
1332more than one county within 10 days after midnight of the date
1333the petition is certified; and the complaint shall set forth the
1334grounds on which the contestant intends to establish his or her
1335right to require a complete check of the petition names and
1336signatures pursuant to subparagraph (1)(a)1. paragraph (1)(a).
1337In the event the court orders a complete check of the petition
1338and the result is not changed as to the success or lack of
1339success of the petitioner in obtaining the requisite number of
1340valid signatures, then such candidate, unless the candidate has
1341filed the oath stating that he or she is unable to pay such
1342charges; announced opponent; representative of a designated
1343political committee; or party, person, or organization
1344submitting the petition, unless such person or organization has
1345filed the oath stating inability to pay such charges, shall pay
1346to the supervisor of elections of each affected county for the
1347complete check an amount calculated at the rate of 10 cents for
1348each additional signature checked or the actual cost of checking
1349such additional signatures, whichever is less.
1350     (6)(a)  If any person is paid to solicit signatures on a
1351petition, an undue burden oath may not subsequently be filed in
1352lieu of paying the fee to have signatures verified for that
1353petition.
1354     (b)  If an undue burden oath has been filed and payment is
1355subsequently made to any person to solicit signatures on a
1356petition, the undue burden oath is no longer valid and a fee for
1357all signatures previously submitted to the supervisor of
1358elections and any that are submitted thereafter shall be paid by
1359the candidate, person, or organization that submitted the undue
1360burden oath. If contributions as defined in s. 106.011 are
1361received, any monetary contributions must first be used to
1362reimburse the supervisor of elections for any signature
1363verification fees that were not paid because of the filing of an
1364undue burden oath.
1365     Section 20.  Section 100.061, Florida Statutes, is amended
1366to read:
1367     100.061  Primary election.-In each year in which a general
1368election is held, a primary election for nomination of
1369candidates of political parties shall be held on the Tuesday 12
137010 weeks prior to the general election. The candidate receiving
1371the highest number of votes cast in each contest in the primary
1372election shall be declared nominated for such office. If two or
1373more candidates receive an equal and highest number of votes for
1374the same office, such candidates shall draw lots to determine
1375which candidate is nominated.
1376     Section 21.  Section 100.101, Florida Statutes, is amended
1377to read:
1378     100.101  Special elections and special primary elections.-
1379Except as provided in s. 100.111(2), A special election or
1380special primary election shall be held in the following cases:
1381     (1)  If no person has been elected at a general election to
1382fill an office which was required to be filled by election at
1383such general election.
1384     (2)  If a vacancy occurs in the office of state senator or
1385member of the state house of representatives.
1386     (3)  If it is necessary to elect presidential electors, by
1387reason of the offices of President and Vice President both
1388having become vacant.
1389     (4)  If a vacancy occurs in the office of member from
1390Florida of the House of Representatives of Congress.
1391     Section 22.  Section 100.111, Florida Statutes, is amended
1392to read:
1393     100.111  Filling vacancy.-
1394     (1)(a)  If any vacancy occurs in any office which is
1395required to be filled pursuant to s. 1(f), Art. IV of the State
1396Constitution and the remainder of the term of such office is 28
1397months or longer, then at the next general election a person
1398shall be elected to fill the unexpired portion of such term,
1399commencing on the first Tuesday after the first Monday following
1400such general election.
1401     (b)  If such a vacancy occurs prior to the first day set by
1402law for qualifying for election to office at such general
1403election, any person seeking nomination or election to the
1404unexpired portion of the term shall qualify within the time
1405prescribed by law for qualifying for other offices to be filled
1406by election at such general election.
1407     (c)  If such a vacancy occurs prior to the primary election
1408but on or after the first day set by law for qualifying, the
1409Secretary of State shall set dates for qualifying for the
1410unexpired portion of the term of such office. Any person seeking
1411nomination or election to the unexpired portion of the term
1412shall qualify within the time set by the Secretary of State. If
1413time does not permit party nominations to be made in conjunction
1414with the primary election, the Governor may call a special
1415primary election to select party nominees for the unexpired
1416portion of such term.
1417     (2)(a)  If, in any state or county office required to be
1418filled by election, a vacancy occurs during an election year by
1419reason of the incumbent having qualified as a candidate for
1420federal office pursuant to s. 99.061, no special election is
1421required. Any person seeking nomination or election to the
1422office so vacated shall qualify within the time prescribed by s.
142399.061 for qualifying for state or county offices to be filled
1424by election.
1425     (b)  If such a vacancy occurs in an election year other
1426than the one immediately preceding expiration of the present
1427term, the Secretary of State shall notify the supervisor of
1428elections in each county served by the office that a vacancy has
1429been created. Such notice shall be provided to the supervisor of
1430elections not later than the close of the first day set for
1431qualifying for state or county office. The supervisor shall
1432provide public notice of the vacancy in any manner the Secretary
1433of State deems appropriate.
1434     (2)(3)  Whenever there is a vacancy for which a special
1435election is required pursuant to s. 100.101, the Governor, after
1436consultation with the Secretary of State, shall fix the dates of
1437a special primary election and a special election. Nominees of
1438political parties shall be chosen under the primary laws of this
1439state in the special primary election to become candidates in
1440the special election. Prior to setting the special election
1441dates, the Governor shall consider any upcoming elections in the
1442jurisdiction where the special election will be held. The dates
1443fixed by the Governor shall be specific days certain and shall
1444not be established by the happening of a condition or stated in
1445the alternative. The dates fixed shall provide a minimum of 2
1446weeks between each election. In the event a vacancy occurs in
1447the office of state senator or member of the House of
1448Representatives when the Legislature is in regular legislative
1449session, the minimum times prescribed by this subsection may be
1450waived upon concurrence of the Governor, the Speaker of the
1451House of Representatives, and the President of the Senate. If a
1452vacancy occurs in the office of state senator and no session of
1453the Legislature is scheduled to be held prior to the next
1454general election, the Governor may fix the dates for the special
1455primary election and for the special election to coincide with
1456the dates of the primary election and general election. If a
1457vacancy in office occurs in any district in the state Senate or
1458House of Representatives or in any congressional district, and
1459no session of the Legislature, or session of Congress if the
1460vacancy is in a congressional district, is scheduled to be held
1461during the unexpired portion of the term, the Governor is not
1462required to call a special election to fill such vacancy.
1463     (a)  The dates for candidates to qualify in such special
1464election or special primary election shall be fixed by the
1465Department of State, and candidates shall qualify not later than
1466noon of the last day so fixed. The dates fixed for qualifying
1467shall allow a minimum of 14 days between the last day of
1468qualifying and the special primary election.
1469     (b)  The filing of campaign expense statements by
1470candidates in such special elections or special primaries and by
1471committees making contributions or expenditures to influence the
1472results of such special primaries or special elections shall be
1473not later than such dates as shall be fixed by the Department of
1474State, and in fixing such dates the Department of State shall
1475take into consideration and be governed by the practical time
1476limitations.
1477     (c)  The dates for a candidate to qualify by the petition
1478process pursuant to s. 99.095 in such special primary or special
1479election shall be fixed by the Department of State. In fixing
1480such dates the Department of State shall take into consideration
1481and be governed by the practical time limitations. Any candidate
1482seeking to qualify by the petition process in a special primary
1483election shall obtain 25 percent of the signatures required by
1484s. 99.095.
1485     (d)  The qualifying fees and party assessments of such
1486candidates as may qualify shall be the same as collected for the
1487same office at the last previous primary for that office. The
1488party assessment shall be paid to the appropriate executive
1489committee of the political party to which the candidate belongs.
1490     (e)  Each county canvassing board shall make as speedy a
1491return of the result of such special primary elections and
1492special elections as time will permit, and the Elections
1493Canvassing Commission likewise shall make as speedy a canvass
1494and declaration of the nominees as time will permit.
1495     (3)(4)(a)  In the event that death, resignation,
1496withdrawal, or removal, or any other cause or event should cause
1497a party to have a vacancy in nomination which leaves no
1498candidate for an office from such party, the filing officer
1499before whom the candidate qualified Department of State shall
1500notify the chair of the appropriate state and, district, or
1501county political party executive committee of such party; and:,
1502     1.  If the vacancy in nomination is for a statewide office,
1503the state party chair shall, within 5 days, the chair shall call
1504a meeting of his or her executive board committee to consider
1505designation of a nominee to fill the vacancy.
1506     2.  If the vacancy in nomination is for the office of
1507United States Representative, state senator, state
1508representative, state attorney, or public defender, the state
1509party chair shall notify the appropriate county chair or chairs
1510and, within 5 days, the appropriate county chair or chairs shall
1511call a meeting of the members of the executive committee in the
1512affected county or counties to consider designation of a nominee
1513to fill the vacancy.
1514     3.  If the vacancy in nomination is for a county office,
1515the state party chair shall notify the appropriate county chair
1516and, within 5 days, the appropriate county chair shall call a
1517meeting of his or her executive committee to consider
1518designation of a nominee to fill the vacancy.
1519
1520The name of any person so designated shall be submitted to the
1521filing officer before whom the candidate qualified Department of
1522State within 7 days after notice to the chair in order that the
1523person designated may have his or her name on the ballot of the
1524ensuing general election. If the name of the new nominee is
1525submitted after the certification of results of the preceding
1526primary election, however, the ballots shall not be changed and
1527the former party nominee's name will appear on the ballot. Any
1528ballots cast for the former party nominee will be counted for
1529the person designated by the political party to replace the
1530former party nominee. If there is no opposition to the party
1531nominee, the person designated by the political party to replace
1532the former party nominee will be elected to office at the
1533general election. For purposes of this paragraph, the term
1534"district political party executive committee" means the members
1535of the state executive committee of a political party from those
1536counties comprising the area involving a district office.
1537     (b)  When, under the circumstances set forth in the
1538preceding paragraph, vacancies in nomination are required to be
1539filled by committee nominations, such vacancies shall be filled
1540by party rule. In any instance in which a nominee is selected by
1541a committee to fill a vacancy in nomination, such nominee shall
1542pay the same filing fee and take the same oath as the nominee
1543would have taken had he or she regularly qualified for election
1544to such office.
1545     (c)  Any person who, at the close of qualifying as
1546prescribed in ss. 99.061 and 105.031, was qualified for
1547nomination or election to or retention in a public office to be
1548filled at the ensuing general election or who attempted to
1549qualify and failed to qualify is prohibited from qualifying as a
1550candidate to fill a vacancy in nomination for any other office
1551to be filled at that general election, even if such person has
1552withdrawn or been eliminated as a candidate for the original
1553office sought. However, this paragraph does not apply to a
1554candidate for the office of Lieutenant Governor who applies to
1555fill a vacancy in nomination for the office of Governor on the
1556same ticket or to a person who has withdrawn or been eliminated
1557as a candidate and who is subsequently designated as a candidate
1558for Lieutenant Governor under s. 99.063.
1559     (4)  A vacancy in nomination is not created if an order of
1560a court that has become final determines that a nominee did not
1561properly qualify or did not meet the necessary qualifications to
1562hold the office for which he or she sought to qualify.
1563     (5)  In the event of unforeseeable circumstances not
1564contemplated in these general election laws concerning the
1565calling and holding of special primary elections and special
1566elections resulting from court order or other unpredictable
1567circumstances, the Department of State shall have the authority
1568to provide for the conduct of orderly elections.
1569     Section 23.  Subsections (1), (3), (6), (7), and (8) of
1570section 100.371, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
1571     100.371 Initiatives; procedure for placement on ballot.-
1572     (1)  Constitutional amendments proposed by initiative shall
1573be placed on the ballot for the general election, provided the
1574initiative petition has been filed with the Secretary of State
1575no later than February 1 of the year the general election is
1576held. A petition shall be deemed to be filed with the Secretary
1577of State upon the date the secretary determines that valid and
1578verified petition forms have been signed by the constitutionally
1579required number and distribution of electors under this code,
1580subject to the right of revocation established in this section.
1581     (3)  An initiative petition form circulated for signature
1582may not be bundled with or attached to any other petition. Each
1583signature shall be dated when made and shall be valid for a
1584period of 2 4 years following such date, provided all other
1585requirements of law are met. The sponsor shall submit signed and
1586dated forms to the appropriate supervisor of elections for the
1587county of residence listed by the person signing the form for
1588verification of as to the number of registered electors whose
1589valid signatures obtained appear thereon. If a signature on a
1590petition is from a registered voter in another county, the
1591supervisor shall notify the petition sponsor of the misfiled
1592petition. The supervisor shall promptly verify the signatures
1593within 30 days after of receipt of the petition forms and
1594payment of the fee required by s. 99.097. The supervisor shall
1595promptly record, in the manner prescribed by the Secretary of
1596State, the date each form is received by the supervisor, and the
1597date the signature on the form is verified as valid. The
1598supervisor may verify that the signature on a form is valid only
1599if:
1600     (a)  The form contains the original signature of the
1601purported elector.
1602     (b)  The purported elector has accurately recorded on the
1603form the date on which he or she signed the form.
1604     (c)  The form accurately sets forth the purported elector's
1605name, street address, city, county, and voter registration
1606number or date of birth.
1607     (d)  The purported elector is, at the time he or she signs
1608the form and at the time the form is verified, a duly qualified
1609and registered elector authorized to vote in the state county in
1610which his or her signature is submitted.
1611
1612The supervisor shall retain the signature forms for at least 1
1613year following the election in which the issue appeared on the
1614ballot or until the Division of Elections notifies the
1615supervisors of elections that the committee that which
1616circulated the petition is no longer seeking to obtain ballot
1617position.
1618     (6)(a)  An elector's signature on a petition form may be
1619revoked within 150 days of the date on which he or she signed
1620the petition form by submitting to the appropriate supervisor of
1621elections a signed petition-revocation form.
1622     (b)  The petition-revocation form and the manner in which
1623signatures are obtained, submitted, and verified shall be
1624subject to the same relevant requirements and timeframes as the
1625corresponding petition form and processes under this code and
1626shall be approved by the Secretary of State before any signature
1627on a petition-revocation form is obtained.
1628     (c)  In those circumstances in which a petition-revocation
1629form for a corresponding initiative petition has not been
1630submitted and approved, an elector may complete and submit a
1631standard petition-revocation form directly to the supervisor of
1632elections. All other requirements and processes apply for the
1633submission and verification of the signatures as for initiative
1634petitions.
1635     (d)  Supervisors of elections shall provide petition-
1636revocation forms to the public at all main and branch offices.
1637     (e)  The petition-revocation form shall be filed with the
1638supervisor of elections by February 1 preceding the next general
1639election or, if the initiative amendment is not certified for
1640ballot position in that election, by February 1 preceding the
1641next successive general election. The supervisor of elections
1642shall promptly verify the signature on the petition-revocation
1643form and process such revocation upon payment, in advance, of a
1644fee of 10 cents or the actual cost of verifying such signature,
1645whichever is less. The supervisor shall promptly record each
1646valid and verified signature on a petition-revocation form in
1647the manner prescribed by the Secretary of State.
1648     (f)  The division shall adopt by rule the petition-
1649revocation forms to be used under this subsection.
1650     (6)(7)  The Department of State may adopt rules in
1651accordance with s. 120.54 to carry out the provisions of
1652subsections (1)-(5) (1)-(6).
1653     (7)(8)  No provision of this code shall be deemed to
1654prohibit a private person exercising lawful control over
1655privately owned property, including property held open to the
1656public for the purposes of a commercial enterprise, from
1657excluding from such property persons seeking to engage in
1658activity supporting or opposing initiative amendments.
1659     Section 24.  Effective July 1, 2012, subsections (3) and
1660(4) of section 101.001, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
1661     101.001  Precincts and polling places; boundaries.-
1662     (3)(a)  Each supervisor of elections shall maintain a
1663suitable map drawn to a scale no smaller than 3 miles to the
1664inch and clearly delineating all major observable features such
1665as roads, streams, and railway lines and showing the current
1666geographical boundaries of each precinct, representative
1667district, and senatorial district, and other type of district in
1668the county subject to the elections process in this code.
1669     (b)  The supervisor shall provide to the department data on
1670all precincts in the county associated with the most recent
1671decennial census blocks within each precinct.
1672     (c)  The department shall maintain a searchable database
1673that contains the precincts and the corresponding most recent
1674decennial census blocks within the precincts for each county,
1675including a historical file that allows the census blocks to be
1676traced through the prior decade.
1677     (d)(b)  The supervisor of elections shall notify the
1678Secretary of State in writing within 10 30 days after any
1679reorganization of precincts and shall furnish a copy of the map
1680showing the current geographical boundaries and designation of
1681each new precinct. However, if precincts are composed of whole
1682census blocks, the supervisor may furnish, in lieu of a copy of
1683the map, a list, in an electronic format prescribed by the
1684Department of State, associating each census block in the county
1685with its precinct.
1686     (e)(c)  Any precinct established or altered under the
1687provisions of this section shall consist of areas bounded on all
1688sides only by census block boundaries from the most recent
1689United States Census. If the census block boundaries split or
1690conflict with another political boundary listed below, the
1691boundary listed below may be used:
1692     1.  Census block boundaries from the most recent United
1693States Census;
1694     1.2.  Governmental unit boundaries reported in the most
1695recent Boundary and Annexation Survey published by the United
1696States Census Bureau;
1697     2.3.  Visible features that are readily distinguishable
1698upon the ground, such as streets, railroads, tracks, streams,
1699and lakes, and that are indicated upon current census maps,
1700official Department of Transportation maps, official municipal
1701maps, official county maps, or a combination of such maps;
1702     3.4.  Boundaries of public parks, public school grounds, or
1703churches; or
1704     4.5.  Boundaries of counties, incorporated municipalities,
1705or other political subdivisions that meet criteria established
1706by the United States Census Bureau for block boundaries.
1707     (d)  Until July 1, 2012, a supervisor may apply for and
1708obtain from the Secretary of State a waiver of the requirement
1709in paragraph (c).
1710     (4)(a)  Within 10 days after there is any change in the
1711division, number, or boundaries of the precincts, or the
1712location of the polling places, the supervisor of elections
1713shall make in writing an accurate description of any new or
1714altered precincts, setting forth the boundary lines and shall
1715identify the location of each new or altered polling place. A
1716copy of the document describing such changes shall be posted at
1717the supervisor's office.
1718     (b)  Any changes in the county precinct data shall be
1719provided to the department within 10 days after a change.
1720     (c)  Precinct data shall include all precincts for which
1721precinct-level election results and voting history results are
1722reported.
1723     Section 25.  Section 101.043, Florida Statutes, is amended
1724to read:
1725     101.043  Identification required at polls.-
1726     (1)(a)  The precinct register, as prescribed in s. 98.461,
1727shall be used at the polls for the purpose of identifying the
1728elector at the polls before prior to allowing him or her to
1729vote. The clerk or inspector shall require each elector, upon
1730entering the polling place, to present one of the following
1731current and valid picture identifications:
1732     1.(a)  Florida driver's license.
1733     2.(b)  Florida identification card issued by the Department
1734of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
1735     3.(c)  United States passport.
1736     4.(d)  Debit or credit card.
1737     5.(e)  Military identification.
1738     6.(f)  Student identification.
1739     7.(g)  Retirement center identification.
1740     8.(h)  Neighborhood association identification.
1741     9.(i)  Public assistance identification.
1742     (b)  If the picture identification does not contain the
1743signature of the elector voter, an additional identification
1744that provides the elector's voter's signature shall be required.
1745The address appearing on the identification presented by the
1746elector may not be used as the basis to confirm an elector's
1747legal residence or otherwise challenge an elector's legal
1748residence. The elector shall sign his or her name in the space
1749provided on the precinct register or on an electronic device
1750provided for recording the elector's voter's signature. The
1751clerk or inspector shall compare the signature with that on the
1752identification provided by the elector and enter his or her
1753initials in the space provided on the precinct register or on an
1754electronic device provided for that purpose and allow the
1755elector to vote if the clerk or inspector is satisfied as to the
1756identity of the elector.
1757     (c)  When an elector presents his or her picture
1758identification to the clerk or inspector and the elector's
1759address on the picture identification matches the elector's
1760address in the supervisor's records, the elector may not be
1761asked to provide additional information or to recite his or her
1762home address.
1763     (2)  If the elector fails to furnish the required
1764identification, the elector shall be allowed to vote a
1765provisional ballot. The canvassing board shall determine the
1766validity of the ballot pursuant to s. 101.048(2).
1767     Section 26.  Section 101.045, Florida Statutes, is amended
1768to read:
1769     101.045  Electors must be registered in precinct;
1770provisions for change of residence or name.-
1771     (1)  A No person is not shall be permitted to vote in any
1772election precinct or district other than the one in which the
1773person has his or her legal residence and in which the person is
1774registered. However, a person temporarily residing outside the
1775county shall be registered in the precinct in which the main
1776office of the supervisor, as designated by the supervisor, is
1777located when the person has no permanent address in the county
1778and it is the person's intention to remain a resident of Florida
1779and of the county in which he or she is registered to vote. Such
1780persons who are registered in the precinct in which the main
1781office of the supervisor, as designated by the supervisor, is
1782located and who are residing outside the county with no
1783permanent address in the county shall not be registered electors
1784of a municipality and therefore shall not be permitted to vote
1785in any municipal election.
1786     (2)(a)  An elector who moves from the precinct in which the
1787elector is registered may be permitted to vote in the precinct
1788to which he or she has moved his or her legal residence, if the
1789change of residence is within the same county and the provided
1790such elector completes an affirmation in substantially the
1791following form:
1792
Change of Legal Residence of Registered
1793
Voter
1794Under penalties for false swearing, I, ...(Name of voter)...,
1795swear (or affirm) that the former address of my legal residence
1796was ...(Address of legal residence)... in the municipality of
1797...., in .... County, Florida, and I was registered to vote in
1798the .... precinct of .... County, Florida; that I have not voted
1799in the precinct of my former registration in this election; that
1800I now reside at ...(Address of legal residence)... in the
1801Municipality of ...., in .... County, Florida, and am therefore
1802eligible to vote in the .... precinct of .... County, Florida;
1803and I further swear (or affirm) that I am otherwise legally
1804registered and entitled to vote.
1805...(Signature of voter whose address of legal residence has
1806changed)...
1807     (b)  Except for an active uniformed services voter or a
1808member of his or her family, an elector whose change of address
1809is from outside the county may not change his or her legal
1810residence at the polling place and vote a regular ballot;
1811however, such elector is entitled to vote a provisional ballot.
1812     (c)(b)  An elector whose name changes because of marriage
1813or other legal process may be permitted to vote, provided such
1814elector completes an affirmation in substantially the following
1815form:
1816
Change of Name of Registered
1817
Voter
1818Under penalties for false swearing, I, ...(New name of
1819voter)..., swear (or affirm) that my name has been changed
1820because of marriage or other legal process. My former name and
1821address of legal residence appear on the registration records of
1822precinct .... as follows:
1823Name     
1824Address     
1825Municipality     
1826County     
1827Florida, Zip     
1828My present name and address of legal residence are as follows:
1829Name     
1830Address     
1831Municipality     
1832County     
1833Florida, Zip     
1834and I further swear (or affirm) that I am otherwise legally
1835registered and entitled to vote.
1836...(Signature of voter whose name has changed)...
1837     (d)(c)  Instead of the affirmation contained in paragraph
1838(a) or paragraph (c) (b), an elector may complete a voter
1839registration application that indicates the change of name or
1840change of address of legal residence.
1841     (e)(d)  Such affirmation or application, when completed and
1842presented at the precinct in which such elector is entitled to
1843vote, and upon verification of the elector's registration, shall
1844entitle such elector to vote as provided in this subsection. If
1845the elector's eligibility to vote cannot be determined, he or
1846she shall be entitled to vote a provisional ballot, subject to
1847the requirements and procedures in s. 101.048. Upon receipt of
1848an affirmation or application certifying a change in address of
1849legal residence or name, the supervisor shall as soon as
1850practicable make the necessary changes in the statewide voter
1851registration system to indicate the change in address of legal
1852residence or name of such elector.
1853     Section 27.  Subsection (2) of section 101.131, Florida
1854Statutes, is amended, and subsections (4) and (5) are added to
1855that section, to read:
1856     101.131  Watchers at polls.-
1857     (2)  Each party, each political committee, and each
1858candidate requesting to have poll watchers shall designate, in
1859writing to the supervisors of elections, on a form prescribed by
1860the division, before prior to noon of the second Tuesday
1861preceding the election poll watchers for each polling room on
1862election day. Designations of poll watchers for early voting
1863areas shall be submitted in writing to the supervisor of
1864elections, on a form prescribed by the division, before noon at
1865least 14 days before early voting begins. The poll watchers for
1866each polling rooms room shall be approved by the supervisor of
1867elections on or before the Tuesday before the election. Poll
1868watchers for early voting areas shall be approved by the
1869supervisor of elections no later than 7 days before early voting
1870begins. The supervisor shall furnish to each election board a
1871list of the poll watchers designated and approved for such
1872polling rooms room or early voting areas area. Designation of
1873poll watchers shall be made by the chair of the county executive
1874committee of a political party, the chair of a political
1875committee, or the candidate requesting to have poll watchers.
1876     (4)  All poll watchers shall be allowed to enter and watch
1877polls in all polling rooms and early voting areas within the
1878county in which they have been designated if the number of poll
1879watchers at any particular polling place does not exceed the
1880number provided in this section.
1881     (5)  The supervisor of elections shall provide to each
1882designated poll watcher, no later than 7 days before early
1883voting begins, a poll watcher identification badge that
1884identifies the poll watcher by name. Each poll watcher must wear
1885his or her identification badge while in the polling room or
1886early voting area.
1887     Section 28.  Subsections (1), (2), and (3) of section
1888101.151, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
1889     101.151 Specifications for ballots.-
1890     (1)(a)  Marksense ballots shall be printed on paper of such
1891thickness that the printing cannot be distinguished from the
1892back and shall meet the specifications of the voting system that
1893will be used to tabulate the ballots.
1894     (b)  Early voting sites may employ a ballot-on-demand
1895production system to print individual marksense ballots,
1896including provisional ballots, for eligible electors pursuant to
1897s. 101.657. Ballot-on-demand technology may be used to produce
1898marksense absentee and election-day ballots. Not later than 30
1899days before an election, the Secretary of State may also
1900authorize in writing the use of ballot-on-demand technology for
1901the production of election-day ballots.
1902     (2)(a)  The ballot shall have the following office titles
1903headings under which shall appear the names of the offices and
1904the names of the candidates for the respective offices in the
1905following order:
1906     1.  The office titles of heading "President and Vice
1907President" and thereunder the names of the candidates for
1908President and Vice President of the United States nominated by
1909the political party that received the highest vote for Governor
1910in the last general election of the Governor in this state. Then
1911shall appear the names of other candidates for President and
1912Vice President of the United States who have been properly
1913nominated.
1914     2.  The office titles Then shall follow the heading
1915"Congressional" and thereunder the offices of United States
1916Senator and Representative in Congress.;
1917     3.  The office titles then the heading "State" and
1918thereunder the offices of Governor and Lieutenant Governor;,
1919Attorney General;, Chief Financial Officer;, Commissioner of
1920Agriculture;, State Attorney, with the applicable judicial
1921circuit; and Public Defender, with the applicable judicial
1922circuit.
1923     4.  together with the names of the candidates for each
1924office and the title of the office which they seek; then the
1925heading "Legislative" and thereunder The office titles offices
1926of State Senator and State Representative, with the applicable
1927district for the office printed beneath.; then the heading
1928"County" and thereunder
1929     5.  The office titles of Clerk of the Circuit Court, or
1930Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller (whichever is
1931applicable and when authorized by law), Clerk of the County
1932Court (when authorized by law), Sheriff, Property Appraiser, Tax
1933Collector, District Superintendent of Schools, and Supervisor of
1934Elections.
1935     6.  The office titles Thereafter follows: members of the
1936Board of County Commissioners, with the applicable district
1937printed beneath each office, and such other county and district
1938offices as are involved in the election, in the order fixed by
1939the Department of State, followed, in the year of their
1940election, by "Party Offices," and thereunder the offices of
1941state and county party executive committee members.
1942     (b)  In a general election, in addition to the names
1943printed on the ballot, a blank space shall be provided under
1944each heading for an office for which a write-in candidate has
1945qualified. With respect to write-in candidates, if two or more
1946candidates are seeking election to one office, only one blank
1947space shall be provided.
1948     (c)(b)  When more than one candidate is nominated for
1949office, the candidates for such office shall qualify and run in
1950a group or district, and the group or district number shall be
1951printed beneath the name of the office. Each nominee of a
1952political party chosen in a primary shall appear on the general
1953election ballot in the same numbered group or district as on the
1954primary election ballot.
1955     (d)(c)  If in any election all the offices as set forth in
1956paragraph (a) are not involved, those offices not to be filled
1957shall be omitted and the remaining offices shall be arranged on
1958the ballot in the order named.
1959     (3)(a)  The names of the candidates of the party that
1960received the highest number of votes for Governor in the last
1961election in which a Governor was elected shall be placed first
1962under the heading for each office on the general election
1963ballot, together with an appropriate abbreviation of the party
1964name; the names of the candidates of the party that received the
1965second highest vote for Governor shall be placed second under
1966the heading for each office, together with an appropriate
1967abbreviation of the party name.
1968     (b)  Minor political party candidates and candidates with
1969no party affiliation shall have their names appear on the
1970general election ballot following the names of recognized
1971political parties, in the same order as they were qualified,
1972certified followed by the names of candidates with no party
1973affiliation, in the order as they were qualified.
1974     Section 29.  Section 101.161, Florida Statutes, is amended
1975to read:
1976     101.161  Referenda; ballots.-
1977     (1)  Whenever a constitutional amendment or other public
1978measure is submitted to the vote of the people, a ballot summary
1979the substance of such amendment or other public measure shall be
1980printed in clear and unambiguous language on the ballot after
1981the list of candidates, followed by the word "yes" and also by
1982the word "no," and shall be styled in such a manner that a "yes"
1983vote will indicate approval of the proposal and a "no" vote will
1984indicate rejection. The ballot summary wording of the substance
1985of the amendment or other public measure and the ballot title to
1986appear on the ballot shall be embodied in the joint resolution,
1987constitutional revision commission proposal, constitutional
1988convention proposal, taxation and budget reform commission
1989proposal, or enabling resolution or ordinance. The ballot
1990summary Except for amendments and ballot language proposed by
1991joint resolution, the substance of the amendment or other public
1992measure shall be an explanatory statement, not exceeding 75
1993words in length, of the chief purpose of the measure. In
1994addition, for every amendment proposed by initiative, the ballot
1995shall include, following the ballot summary, a separate
1996financial impact statement concerning the measure prepared by
1997the Financial Impact Estimating Conference in accordance with s.
1998100.371(5). The ballot title shall consist of a caption, not
1999exceeding 15 words in length, by which the measure is commonly
2000referred to or spoken of. This subsection does not apply to
2001constitutional amendments or revisions proposed by joint
2002resolution.
2003     (2)  The ballot summary substance and ballot title of a
2004constitutional amendment proposed by initiative shall be
2005prepared by the sponsor and approved by the Secretary of State
2006in accordance with rules adopted pursuant to s. 120.54. The
2007Department of State shall give each proposed constitutional
2008amendment a designating number for convenient reference. This
2009number designation shall appear on the ballot. Designating
2010numbers shall be assigned in the order of filing or
2011certification and in accordance with rules adopted by the
2012Department of State. The Department of State shall furnish the
2013designating number, the ballot title, and, unless otherwise
2014specified in a joint resolution, the ballot summary the
2015substance of each amendment to the supervisor of elections of
2016each county in which such amendment is to be voted on.
2017     (3)(a)  Each joint resolution that proposes a
2018constitutional amendment or revision shall include one or more
2019ballot statements set forth in order of priority. Each ballot
2020statement shall consist of a ballot title, by which the measure
2021is commonly referred to or spoken of, not exceeding 15 words in
2022length, and either a ballot summary that describes the chief
2023purpose of the amendment or revision in clear and unambiguous
2024language, or the full text of the amendment or revision. The
2025Department of State shall furnish a designating number pursuant
2026to subsection (2) and the appropriate ballot statement to the
2027supervisor of elections of each county. The ballot statement
2028shall be printed on the ballot after the list of candidates,
2029followed by the word "yes" and also by the word "no," and shall
2030be styled in such a manner that a "yes" vote will indicate
2031approval of the amendment or revision and a "no" vote will
2032indicate rejection.
2033     (b)1.  Any action for a judicial determination that one or
2034more ballot statements embodied in a joint resolution are
2035defective must be commenced by filing a complaint or petition
2036with the appropriate court within 30 days after the joint
2037resolution is filed with the Secretary of State. The complaint
2038or petition shall assert all grounds for challenge to each
2039ballot statement. Any ground not asserted within 30 days after
2040the joint resolution is filed with the Secretary of State is
2041waived.
2042     2.  The court, including any appellate court, shall accord
2043an action described in subparagraph 1. priority over other
2044pending cases and render a decision as expeditiously as
2045possible. If the court finds that all ballot statements embodied
2046in a joint resolution are defective and further appeals are
2047declined, abandoned, or exhausted, unless otherwise provided in
2048the joint resolution, the Attorney General shall, within 10
2049days, prepare and submit to the Department of State a revised
2050ballot title or ballot summary that corrects the deficiencies
2051identified by the court, and the Department of State shall
2052furnish a designating number and the revised ballot title or
2053ballot summary to the supervisor of elections of each county for
2054placement on the ballot. The court shall retain jurisdiction
2055over challenges to a revised ballot title or ballot summary
2056prepared by the Attorney General, and any challenge to a revised
2057ballot title or ballot summary must be filed within 10 days
2058after a revised ballot title or ballot summary is submitted to
2059the Department of State.
2060     3.  A ballot statement that consists of the full text of an
2061amendment or revision shall be presumed to be a clear and
2062unambiguous statement of the substance and effect of the
2063amendment or revision, providing fair notice to the electors of
2064the content of the amendment or revision and sufficiently
2065advising electors of the issue upon which they are to vote.
2066     (4)(3)(a)  For any general election in which the Secretary
2067of State, for any circuit, or the supervisor of elections, for
2068any county, has certified the ballot position for an initiative
2069to change the method of selection of judges, the ballot for any
2070circuit must contain the statement in paragraph (b) or paragraph
2071(c) and the ballot for any county must contain the statement in
2072paragraph (d) or paragraph (e).
2073     (b)  In any circuit where the initiative is to change the
2074selection of circuit court judges to selection by merit
2075selection and retention, the ballot shall state: "Shall the
2076method of selecting circuit court judges in the ...(number of
2077the circuit)... judicial circuit be changed from election by a
2078vote of the people to selection by the judicial nominating
2079commission and appointment by the Governor with subsequent terms
2080determined by a retention vote of the people?" This statement
2081must be followed by the word "yes" and also by the word "no."
2082     (c)  In any circuit where the initiative is to change the
2083selection of circuit court judges to election by the voters, the
2084ballot shall state: "Shall the method of selecting circuit court
2085judges in the ...(number of the circuit)... judicial circuit be
2086changed from selection by the judicial nominating commission and
2087appointment by the Governor with subsequent terms determined by
2088a retention vote of the people to election by a vote of the
2089people?" This statement must be followed by the word "yes" and
2090also by the word "no."
2091     (d)  In any county where the initiative is to change the
2092selection of county court judges to merit selection and
2093retention, the ballot shall state: "Shall the method of
2094selecting county court judges in ...(name of county)... be
2095changed from election by a vote of the people to selection by
2096the judicial nominating commission and appointment by the
2097Governor with subsequent terms determined by a retention vote of
2098the people?" This statement must be followed by the word "yes"
2099and also by the word "no."
2100     (e)  In any county where the initiative is to change the
2101selection of county court judges to election by the voters, the
2102ballot shall state: "Shall the method of selecting county court
2103judges in ...(name of the county)... be changed from selection
2104by the judicial nominating commission and appointment by the
2105Governor with subsequent terms determined by a retention vote of
2106the people to election by a vote of the people?" This statement
2107must be followed by the word "yes" and also by the word "no."
2108     Section 30.  The amendment of section 101.161, Florida
2109Statutes, made by this act applies retroactively to all joint
2110resolutions adopted by the Legislature during the 2011 Regular
2111Session, except that any legal action challenging a ballot title
2112or ballot summary embodied in such joint resolution or
2113challenging placement on the ballot of the full text of the
2114proposed amendment or revision to the State Constitution as
2115specified in such joint resolution must be commenced within 30
2116days after the effective date of this act or within 30 days
2117after the joint resolution to which a challenge relates is filed
2118with the Secretary of State, whichever occurs later.
2119     Section 31.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
2120101.5605, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
2121     101.5605 Examination and approval of equipment.-
2122     (2)(a)  Any person owning or interested in an electronic or
2123electromechanical voting system may submit it to the Department
2124of State for examination. The vote counting segment shall be
2125certified after a satisfactory evaluation testing has been
2126performed according to the standards adopted under s. 101.015(1)
2127electronic industry standards. This testing shall include, but
2128is not limited to, testing of all software required for the
2129voting system's operation; the ballot reader; the rote
2130processor, especially in its logic and memory components; the
2131digital printer; the fail-safe operations; the counting center
2132environmental requirements; and the equipment reliability
2133estimate. For the purpose of assisting in examining the system,
2134the department shall employ or contract for services of at least
2135one individual who is expert in one or more fields of data
2136processing, mechanical engineering, and public administration
2137and shall require from the individual a written report of his or
2138her examination.
2139     Section 32.  Subsection (11) of section 101.5606, Florida
2140Statutes, is amended to read
2141     101.5606 Requirements for approval of systems.-No
2142electronic or electromechanical voting system shall be approved
2143by the Department of State unless it is so constructed that:
2144     (11)  It is capable of automatically producing precinct
2145totals in printed, marked, or punched form, or a combination
2146thereof.
2147     Section 33.  Subsection (4) is added to section 101.56075,
2148Florida Statutes, to read:
2149     101.56075  Voting methods.-
2150     (4)  By December 31, 2013, all voting systems utilized by
2151voters during a state election shall permit placement on the
2152ballot of the full text of a constitutional amendment or
2153revision containing stricken or underlined text.
2154     Section 34.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (4) of section
2155101.5612, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
2156     101.5612  Testing of tabulating equipment.-
2157     (4)(a)1.  For electronic or electromechanical voting
2158systems configured to include electronic or electromechanical
2159tabulation devices which are distributed to the precincts, all
2160or a sample of the devices to be used in the election shall be
2161publicly tested. If a sample is to be tested, the sample shall
2162consist of a random selection of at least 5 percent or 10 of the
2163devices for an optical scan system or 2 percent of the devices
2164for a touchscreen system or 10 of the devices for either system,
2165as applicable, whichever is greater. For touchscreen systems
2166used for voters having a disability, a sample of at least 2
2167percent of the devices must be tested. The test shall be
2168conducted by processing a group of ballots, causing the device
2169to output results for the ballots processed, and comparing the
2170output of results to the results expected for the ballots
2171processed. The group of ballots shall be produced so as to
2172record a predetermined number of valid votes for each candidate
2173and on each measure and to include for each office one or more
2174ballots which have activated voting positions in excess of the
2175number allowed by law in order to test the ability of the
2176tabulating device to reject such votes.
2177     2.  If any tested tabulating device is found to have an
2178error in tabulation, it shall be deemed unsatisfactory. For each
2179device deemed unsatisfactory, the canvassing board shall take
2180steps to determine the cause of the error, shall attempt to
2181identify and test other devices that could reasonably be
2182expected to have the same error, and shall test a number of
2183additional devices sufficient to determine that all devices are
2184satisfactory. Upon deeming any device unsatisfactory, the
2185canvassing board may require all devices to be tested or may
2186declare that all devices are unsatisfactory.
2187     3.  If the operation or output of any tested tabulation
2188device, such as spelling or the order of candidates on a report,
2189is in error, such problem shall be reported to the canvassing
2190board. The canvassing board shall then determine if the reported
2191problem warrants its deeming the device unsatisfactory.
2192     Section 35.  Subsection (4) of section 101.5614, Florida
2193Statutes, is amended to read:
2194     101.5614 Canvass of returns.-
2195     (4)  If ballot cards are used, and separate write-in
2196ballots or envelopes for casting write-in votes are used, write-
2197in ballots or the envelopes on which write-in ballots have been
2198cast shall be serially numbered, starting with the number one,
2199and the same number shall be placed on the ballot card of the
2200voter. This process may be completed at either the precinct by
2201the election board or at the central counting location. For each
2202ballot or ballot image and ballot envelope on which write-in
2203votes have been cast, the canvassing board shall compare the
2204write-in votes with the votes cast on the ballot card; if the
2205total number of votes for any office exceeds the number allowed
2206by law, a notation to that effect, specifying the office
2207involved, shall be entered on the back of the ballot card or in
2208a margin if voting areas are printed on both sides of the ballot
2209card. such votes shall not be counted. All valid votes shall be
2210tallied by the canvassing board.
2211     Section 36.  Subsection (6) is added to section 101.591,
2212Florida Statutes, to read:
2213     101.591  Voting system audit.-
2214     (6)  If a manual recount is undertaken pursuant to s.
2215102.166, the canvassing board is not required to perform the
2216audit provided for in this section.
2217     Section 37.  Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1) and
2218subsections (3) and (4) of section 101.62, Florida Statutes, are
2219amended to read:
2220     101.62  Request for absentee ballots.-
2221     (1)(a)  The supervisor shall accept a request for an
2222absentee ballot from an elector in person or in writing. One
2223request shall be deemed sufficient to receive an absentee ballot
2224for all elections through the end of the calendar year of the
2225second ensuing next regularly scheduled general election, unless
2226the elector or the elector's designee indicates at the time the
2227request is made the elections for which the elector desires to
2228receive an absentee ballot. Such request may be considered
2229canceled when any first-class mail sent by the supervisor to the
2230elector is returned as undeliverable.
2231     (b)  The supervisor may accept a written or telephonic
2232request for an absentee ballot from the elector, or, if directly
2233instructed by the elector, a member of the elector's immediate
2234family, or the elector's legal guardian. For purposes of this
2235section, the term "immediate family" has the same meaning as
2236specified in paragraph (4)(c) (4)(b). The person making the
2237request must disclose:
2238     1.  The name of the elector for whom the ballot is
2239requested.
2240     2.  The elector's address.
2241     3.  The elector's date of birth.
2242     4.  The requester's name.
2243     5.  The requester's address.
2244     6.  The requester's driver's license number, if available.
2245     7.  The requester's relationship to the elector.
2246     8.  The requester's signature (written requests only).
2247     (3)  For each request for an absentee ballot received, the
2248supervisor shall record the date the request was made, the date
2249the absentee ballot was delivered to the voter or the voter's
2250designee or the date the absentee ballot was delivered to the
2251post office or other carrier, the date the ballot was received
2252by the supervisor, and such other information he or she may deem
2253necessary. This information shall be provided in electronic
2254format as provided by rule adopted by the division. The
2255information shall be updated and made available no later than 8
2256a.m. noon of each day, including weekends, beginning 60 days
2257before the primary until 15 days after the general election and
2258shall be contemporaneously provided to the division. This
2259information shall be confidential and exempt from the provisions
2260of s. 119.07(1) and shall be made available to or reproduced
2261only for the voter requesting the ballot, a canvassing board, an
2262election official, a political party or official thereof, a
2263candidate who has filed qualification papers and is opposed in
2264an upcoming election, and registered political committees or
2265registered committees of continuous existence, for political
2266purposes only.
2267     (4)(a)  No later than 45 days before each presidential
2268preference primary election, primary election, and general
2269election, the supervisor of elections shall send an absentee
2270ballot as provided in subparagraph (c)2. (b)2. to each absent
2271uniformed services voter and to each overseas voter who has
2272requested an absentee ballot.
2273     (b)  The supervisor of elections shall mail an absentee
2274ballot to each absent qualified voter, other than those listed
2275in paragraph (a), who has requested such a ballot, between the
227635th and 28th days before the presidential preference primary
2277election, primary election, and general election. Except as
2278otherwise provided in subsection (2) and after the period
2279described in this paragraph, the supervisor shall mail absentee
2280ballots within 2 business days after receiving a request for
2281such a ballot.
2282     (c)(b)  The supervisor shall provide an absentee ballot to
2283each elector by whom a request for that ballot has been made by
2284one of the following means:
2285     1.  By nonforwardable, return-if-undeliverable mail to the
2286elector's current mailing address on file with the supervisor
2287or, unless the elector specifies in the request that:
2288     a.  The elector is absent from the county and does not plan
2289to return before the day of the election;
2290     b.  The elector is temporarily unable to occupy the
2291residence because of hurricane, tornado, flood, fire, or other
2292emergency or natural disaster; or
2293     c.  The elector is in a hospital, assisted living facility,
2294nursing home, short-term medical or rehabilitation facility, or
2295correctional facility,
2296
2297in which case the supervisor shall mail the ballot by
2298nonforwardable, return-if-undeliverable mail to any other
2299address the elector specifies in the request.
2300     2.  By forwardable mail, e-mail, or facsimile machine
2301transmission to absent uniformed services voters and overseas
2302voters. The absent uniformed services voter or overseas voter
2303may designate in the absentee ballot request the preferred
2304method of transmission. If the voter does not designate the
2305method of transmission, the absentee ballot shall be mailed.
2306     3.  By personal delivery before 7 p.m. on election day to
2307the elector, upon presentation of the identification required in
2308s. 101.043.
2309     4.  By delivery to a designee on election day or up to 5
2310days prior to the day of an election. Any elector may designate
2311in writing a person to pick up the ballot for the elector;
2312however, the person designated may not pick up more than two
2313absentee ballots per election, other than the designee's own
2314ballot, except that additional ballots may be picked up for
2315members of the designee's immediate family. For purposes of this
2316section, "immediate family" means the designee's spouse or the
2317parent, child, grandparent, or sibling of the designee or of the
2318designee's spouse. The designee shall provide to the supervisor
2319the written authorization by the elector and a picture
2320identification of the designee and must complete an affidavit.
2321The designee shall state in the affidavit that the designee is
2322authorized by the elector to pick up that ballot and shall
2323indicate if the elector is a member of the designee's immediate
2324family and, if so, the relationship. The department shall
2325prescribe the form of the affidavit. If the supervisor is
2326satisfied that the designee is authorized to pick up the ballot
2327and that the signature of the elector on the written
2328authorization matches the signature of the elector on file, the
2329supervisor shall give the ballot to that designee for delivery
2330to the elector.
2331     Section 38.  Section 101.65, Florida Statutes, is amended
2332to read:
2333     101.65  Instructions to absent electors.-The supervisor
2334shall enclose with each absentee ballot separate printed
2335instructions in substantially the following form:
2336
2337     READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY BEFORE MARKING BALLOT.
2338     1.  VERY IMPORTANT. In order to ensure that your absentee
2339ballot will be counted, it should be completed and returned as
2340soon as possible so that it can reach the supervisor of
2341elections of the county in which your precinct is located no
2342later than 7 p.m. on the day of the election.
2343     2.  Mark your ballot in secret as instructed on the ballot.
2344You must mark your own ballot unless you are unable to do so
2345because of blindness, disability, or inability to read or write.
2346     3.  Mark only the number of candidates or issue choices for
2347a race as indicated on the ballot. If you are allowed to "Vote
2348for One" candidate and you vote for more than one candidate,
2349your vote in that race will not be counted.
2350     4.  Place your marked ballot in the enclosed secrecy
2351envelope.
2352     5.  Insert the secrecy envelope into the enclosed mailing
2353envelope which is addressed to the supervisor.
2354     6.  Seal the mailing envelope and completely fill out the
2355Voter's Certificate on the back of the mailing envelope.
2356     7.  VERY IMPORTANT. In order for your absentee ballot to be
2357counted, you must sign your name on the line above (Voter's
2358Signature). An absentee ballot will be considered illegal and
2359not be counted if the signature on the voter's certificate does
2360not match the signature on record. The signature on file at the
2361start of the canvass of the absentee ballots is the signature
2362that will be used to verify your signature on the voter's
2363certificate. If you need to update your signature for this
2364election, send your signature update on a voter registration
2365application to your supervisor of elections so that it is
2366received no later than the start of the canvassing of absentee
2367ballots, which occurs no earlier than the 15th day before
2368election day.
2369     8.  VERY IMPORTANT. If you are an overseas voter, you must
2370include the date you signed the Voter's Certificate on the line
2371above (Date) or your ballot may not be counted.
2372     9.  Mail, deliver, or have delivered the completed mailing
2373envelope. Be sure there is sufficient postage if mailed.
2374     10.  FELONY NOTICE. It is a felony under Florida law to
2375accept any gift, payment, or gratuity in exchange for your vote
2376for a candidate. It is also a felony under Florida law to vote
2377in an election using a false identity or false address, or under
2378any other circumstances making your ballot false or fraudulent.
2379     Section 39.  Subsection (1) of section 101.657, Florida
2380Statutes, is amended to read:
2381     101.657  Early voting.-
2382     (1)(a)  As a convenience to the voter, the supervisor of
2383elections shall allow an elector to vote early in the main or
2384branch office of the supervisor. The supervisor shall mark,
2385code, indicate on, or otherwise track the voter's precinct for
2386each early voted ballot. In order for a branch office to be used
2387for early voting, it shall be a permanent facility of the
2388supervisor and shall have been designated and used as such for
2389at least 1 year prior to the election. The supervisor may also
2390designate any city hall or permanent public library facility as
2391early voting sites; however, if so designated, the sites must be
2392geographically located so as to provide all voters in the county
2393an equal opportunity to cast a ballot, insofar as is
2394practicable. The results or tabulation of votes cast during
2395early voting may not be made before the close of the polls on
2396election day. Results shall be reported by precinct.
2397     (b)  The supervisor shall designate each early voting site
2398by no later than the 30th day prior to an election and shall
2399designate an early voting area, as defined in s. 97.021, at each
2400early voting site. The supervisor shall provide to the division
2401no later than the 30th day before an election the address of
2402each early voting site and the hours that early voting will
2403occur at each site.
2404     (c)  All early voting sites in a county shall be open on
2405the same days for the same amount of time and shall allow any
2406person in line at the closing of an early voting site to vote.
2407     (d)  Early voting shall begin on the 10th 15th day before
2408an election that contains state or federal races and end on the
24093rd 2nd day before the an election, and. For purposes of a
2410special election held pursuant to s. 100.101, early voting shall
2411begin on the 8th day before an election and end on the 2nd day
2412before an election. Early voting shall be provided for no less
2413than 6 8 hours and no more than 12 hours per day weekday and 8
2414hours in the aggregate each weekend at each site during the
2415applicable period periods. The supervisor of elections may
2416provide early voting for elections that are not held in
2417conjunction with a state or federal election. However, the
2418supervisor has the discretion to determine the hours of
2419operation of early voting sites in those elections. Early voting
2420sites shall open no sooner than 7 a.m. and close no later than 7
2421p.m. on each applicable day.
2422     (e)  Notwithstanding the requirements of s. 100.3605,
2423municipalities may provide early voting in municipal elections
2424that are not held in conjunction with county or state elections.
2425If a municipality provides early voting, it may designate as
2426many sites as necessary and shall conduct its activities in
2427accordance with the provisions of paragraphs (a)-(c). The
2428supervisor is not required to conduct early voting if it is
2429provided pursuant to this subsection.
2430     (f)  Notwithstanding the requirements of s. 189.405,
2431special districts may provide early voting in any district
2432election not held in conjunction with county or state elections.
2433If a special district provides early voting, it may designate as
2434many sites as necessary and shall conduct its activities in
2435accordance with the provisions of paragraphs (a)-(c). The
2436supervisor is not required to conduct early voting if it is
2437provided pursuant to this subsection.
2438     Section 40.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
2439101.68, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
2440     101.68  Canvassing of absentee ballot.-
2441     (2)(a)  The county canvassing board may begin the
2442canvassing of absentee ballots at 7 a.m. on the 15th sixth day
2443before the election, but not later than noon on the day
2444following the election. In addition, for any county using
2445electronic tabulating equipment, the processing of absentee
2446ballots through such tabulating equipment may begin at 7 a.m. on
2447the 15th sixth day before the election. However, notwithstanding
2448any such authorization to begin canvassing or otherwise
2449processing absentee ballots early, no result shall be released
2450until after the closing of the polls in that county on election
2451day. Any supervisor of elections, deputy supervisor of
2452elections, canvassing board member, election board member, or
2453election employee who releases the results of a canvassing or
2454processing of absentee ballots prior to the closing of the polls
2455in that county on election day commits a felony of the third
2456degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s.
2457775.084.
2458     Section 41.  Subsection (2) of section 101.6923, Florida
2459Statutes, is amended to read:
2460     101.6923  Special absentee ballot instructions for certain
2461first-time voters.-
2462     (2)  A voter covered by this section shall be provided with
2463printed instructions with his or her absentee ballot in
2464substantially the following form:
2465
2466READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY BEFORE MARKING YOUR BALLOT.
2467FAILURE TO FOLLOW THESE INSTRUCTIONS MAY CAUSE YOUR BALLOT NOT
2468TO COUNT.
2469
2470     1.  In order to ensure that your absentee ballot will be
2471counted, it should be completed and returned as soon as possible
2472so that it can reach the supervisor of elections of the county
2473in which your precinct is located no later than 7 p.m. on the
2474date of the election.
2475     2.  Mark your ballot in secret as instructed on the ballot.
2476You must mark your own ballot unless you are unable to do so
2477because of blindness, disability, or inability to read or write.
2478     3.  Mark only the number of candidates or issue choices for
2479a race as indicated on the ballot. If you are allowed to "Vote
2480for One" candidate and you vote for more than one, your vote in
2481that race will not be counted.
2482     4.  Place your marked ballot in the enclosed secrecy
2483envelope and seal the envelope.
2484     5.  Insert the secrecy envelope into the enclosed envelope
2485bearing the Voter's Certificate. Seal the envelope and
2486completely fill out the Voter's Certificate on the back of the
2487envelope.
2488     a.  You must sign your name on the line above (Voter's
2489Signature).
2490     b.  If you are an overseas voter, you must include the date
2491you signed the Voter's Certificate on the line above (Date) or
2492your ballot may not be counted.
2493     c.  An absentee ballot will be considered illegal and will
2494not be counted if the signature on the Voter's Certificate does
2495not match the signature on record. The signature on file at the
2496start of the canvass of the absentee ballots is the signature
2497that will be used to verify your signature on the Voter's
2498Certificate. If you need to update your signature for this
2499election, send your signature update on a voter registration
2500application to your supervisor of elections so that it is
2501received no later than the start of canvassing of absentee
2502ballots, which occurs no earlier than the 15th day before
2503election day.
2504     6.  Unless you meet one of the exemptions in Item 7., you
2505must make a copy of one of the following forms of
2506identification:
2507     a.  Identification which must include your name and
2508photograph: United States passport; debit or credit card;
2509military identification; student identification; retirement
2510center identification; neighborhood association identification;
2511or public assistance identification; or
2512     b.  Identification which shows your name and current
2513residence address: current utility bill, bank statement,
2514government check, paycheck, or government document (excluding
2515voter identification card).
2516     7.  The identification requirements of Item 6. do not apply
2517if you meet one of the following requirements:
2518     a.  You are 65 years of age or older.
2519     b.  You have a temporary or permanent physical disability.
2520     c.  You are a member of a uniformed service on active duty
2521who, by reason of such active duty, will be absent from the
2522county on election day.
2523     d.  You are a member of the Merchant Marine who, by reason
2524of service in the Merchant Marine, will be absent from the
2525county on election day.
2526     e.  You are the spouse or dependent of a member referred to
2527in paragraph c. or paragraph d. who, by reason of the active
2528duty or service of the member, will be absent from the county on
2529election day.
2530     f.  You are currently residing outside the United States.
2531     8.  Place the envelope bearing the Voter's Certificate into
2532the mailing envelope addressed to the supervisor. Insert a copy
2533of your identification in the mailing envelope. DO NOT PUT YOUR
2534IDENTIFICATION INSIDE THE SECRECY ENVELOPE WITH THE BALLOT OR
2535INSIDE THE ENVELOPE WHICH BEARS THE VOTER'S CERTIFICATE OR YOUR
2536BALLOT WILL NOT COUNT.
2537     9.  Mail, deliver, or have delivered the completed mailing
2538envelope. Be sure there is sufficient postage if mailed.
2539     10.  FELONY NOTICE. It is a felony under Florida law to
2540accept any gift, payment, or gratuity in exchange for your vote
2541for a candidate. It is also a felony under Florida law to vote
2542in an election using a false identity or false address, or under
2543any other circumstances making your ballot false or fraudulent.
2544     Section 42.  Subsection (3) of section 101.75, Florida
2545Statutes, is amended to read:
2546     101.75 Municipal elections; change of dates for cause.-
2547     (3)  Notwithstanding any provision of local law or
2548municipal charter, the governing body of a municipality may, by
2549ordinance, move the date of any municipal election to a date
2550concurrent with any statewide or countywide election. The dates
2551for qualifying for the election moved by the passage of such
2552ordinance shall be specifically provided for in the ordinance
2553and shall run for no less than 14 days. The term of office for
2554any elected municipal official shall commence as provided by the
2555relevant municipal charter or ordinance.
2556     Section 43.  Subsection (4) of section 102.141, Florida
2557Statutes, is amended to read:
2558     102.141  County canvassing board; duties.-
2559     (4)  The canvassing board shall report all early voting and
2560all tabulated absentee results to the Department of State within
256130 minutes after the polls close. Thereafter, the canvassing
2562board shall report, with the exception of provisional ballot
2563results, updated precinct election results to the department at
2564least every 45 minutes until all results are completely
2565reported. The supervisor of elections shall notify the
2566department immediately of any circumstances that do not permit
2567periodic updates as required. Results shall be submitted in a
2568format prescribed by the department submit by 11:59 p.m. on
2569election night the preliminary returns it has received to the
2570Department of State in a format provided by the department.
2571     Section 44.  Subsection (4) of section 102.168, Florida
2572Statutes, is amended, and subsection (8) is added to that
2573section, to read:
2574     102.168  Contest of election.-
2575     (4)  The county canvassing board responsible for canvassing
2576the election is an indispensable and proper party defendant in
2577county and local elections.; The Elections Canvassing Commission
2578is an indispensable and proper party defendant in federal,
2579state, and multicounty elections and in elections for justice of
2580the Supreme Court, judge of a district court of appeal, and
2581judge of a circuit court. races; and The successful candidate is
2582an indispensable party to any action brought to contest the
2583election or nomination of a candidate.
2584     (8)  In any contest that requires a review of the
2585canvassing board's decision on the legality of an absentee
2586ballot pursuant to s. 101.68 based upon a comparison of the
2587signature on the voter's certificate and the signature of the
2588elector in the registration records, the circuit court may not
2589review or consider any evidence other than the signatures on the
2590voter's certificate and the signature of the elector in the
2591registration records. The court's review of such issue shall be
2592to determine only if the canvassing board abused its discretion
2593in making its decision.
2594     Section 45.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (4) of section
2595103.021, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
2596     103.021  Nomination for presidential electors.-Candidates
2597for presidential electors shall be nominated in the following
2598manner:
2599     (4)(a)  A minor political party that is affiliated with a
2600national party holding a national convention to nominate
2601candidates for President and Vice President of the United States
2602may have the names of its candidates for President and Vice
2603President of the United States printed on the general election
2604ballot by filing with the Department of State a certificate
2605naming the candidates for President and Vice President and
2606listing the required number of persons to serve as electors.
2607Notification to the Department of State under this subsection
2608shall be made by September 1 of the year in which the election
2609is held. When the Department of State has been so notified, it
2610shall order the names of the candidates nominated by the minor
2611political party to be included on the ballot and shall permit
2612the required number of persons to be certified as electors in
2613the same manner as other party candidates. As used in this
2614section, the term "national party" means a political party that
2615is registered with and recognized as a qualified national
2616committee of a political party by the Federal Election
2617Commission established and admitted to the ballot in at least
2618one state other than Florida.
2619     Section 46.  Section 103.095, Florida Statutes, is created
2620to read:
2621     103.095  Minor political parties.-
2622     (1)  Any group of citizens organized for the general
2623purposes of electing to office qualified persons and determining
2624public issues under the democratic processes of the United
2625States may become a minor political party of this state by
2626filing with the department a certificate showing the name of the
2627organization, the names and addresses of its current officers,
2628including the members of its executive committee, accompanied by
2629a completed uniform statewide voter registration application as
2630specified in s. 97.052 for each of its current officers and
2631members of its executive committee which reflect their
2632affiliation with the proposed minor political party, and a copy
2633of its constitution, bylaws, and rules and regulations.
2634     (2)  Each elector registered to vote in the minor political
2635party in which he or she has so designated has a fundamental
2636right to fully and meaningfully participate in the business and
2637affairs of the minor political party without any monetary
2638encumbrance. The constitution, bylaws, rules, regulations, or
2639other equivalent documents must reflect this fundamental right
2640and must provide for and contain reasonable provisions that, at
2641a minimum, prescribe procedures to: prescribe its membership;
2642conduct its meetings according to generally accepted
2643parliamentary practices; timely notify its members as to the
2644time, date, and place of all of its meetings; timely publish
2645notice on its public and functioning website as to the time,
2646date, and place of all of its meetings; elect its officers;
2647remove its officers; make party nominations when required by
2648law; conduct campaigns for party nominees; raise and expend
2649party funds; select delegates to its national convention, if
2650applicable; select presidential electors, if applicable; and
2651alter or amend all of its governing documents.
2652     (3)  The members of the executive committee must elect a
2653chair, vice chair, secretary, and treasurer, all of whom shall
2654be members of the minor political party and no member may hold
2655more than one office, except that one person may hold the
2656offices of secretary and treasurer.
2657     (4)  Upon approval of the minor political party's filing,
2658the department shall process the voter registration applications
2659submitted by the minor political party's officers and members of
2660its executive committee. It shall be the duty of the minor
2661political party to notify the department of any changes in the
2662filing certificate within 5 days after such changes.
2663     (5)  The Division of Elections shall adopt rules to
2664prescribe the manner in which political parties, including minor
2665political parties, may have their filings with the Department of
2666State canceled. Such rules shall, at a minimum, provide for:
2667     (a)  Notice, which must contain the facts and conduct that
2668warrant the intended action, including, but not limited to, the
2669failure to have any voters registered in the party, the failure
2670to notify the department of replacement officers, the failure to
2671file campaign finance reports, the failure to adopt and file
2672with the department all governing documents containing the
2673provisions specified in subsection (2), and limited activity.
2674     (b)  Adequate opportunity to respond.
2675     (c)  Appeal of the decision to the Florida Elections
2676Commission. Such appeals are exempt from the confidentiality
2677provisions of s. 106.25.
2678     (6)  The requirements of this section are retroactive for
2679any minor political party registered with the department on July
26801, 2011, and must be complied with within 180 days after the
2681department provides notice to the minor political party of the
2682requirements contained in this section. Failure of the minor
2683political party to comply with the requirements within 180 days
2684after receipt of the notice shall automatically result in the
2685cancellation of the minor political party's registration.
2686     Section 47.  Section 103.101, Florida Statutes, is amended
2687to read:
2688     103.101  Presidential preference primary.-
2689     (1)(a)  There shall be a Presidential Preference Primary
2690Date Selection Committee composed of the Secretary of State, who
2691shall be a nonvoting chair; three members, no more than two of
2692whom may be from the same political party, appointed by the
2693Governor; three members, no more than two of whom may be from
2694the same political party, appointed by the Speaker of the House
2695of Representatives; and three members, no more than two of whom
2696may be from the same political party, appointed by the President
2697of the Senate. No later than October 1 of the year preceding the
2698presidential preference primary, the committee shall meet and
2699set a date for the presidential preference primary. The date
2700selected may be no earlier than the first Tuesday in January and
2701no later than the first Tuesday in March in the year of the
2702presidential preference primary. The presidential preference
2703primary shall be held in each year the number of which is a
2704multiple of four.
2705     (b)  Each political party other than a minor political
2706party shall, on the date selected by the Presidential Preference
2707Primary Date Selection Committee last Tuesday in January in each
2708year the number of which is a multiple of 4, elect one person to
2709be the candidate for nomination of such party for President of
2710the United States or select delegates to the national nominating
2711convention, as provided by party rule. Any party rule directing
2712the vote of delegates at a national nominating convention shall
2713reasonably reflect the results of the presidential preference
2714primary, if one is held.
2715     (2)(a)  There shall be a Presidential Candidate Selection
2716Committee composed of the Secretary of State, who shall be a
2717nonvoting chair; the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
2718the President of the Senate; the minority leader of each house
2719of the Legislature; and the chair of each political party
2720required to have a presidential preference primary under this
2721section.
2722     (b)  By October 31 of the year preceding the presidential
2723preference primary, each political party shall submit to the
2724Secretary of State a list of its presidential candidates to be
2725placed on the presidential preference primary ballot or
2726candidates entitled to have delegates appear on the presidential
2727preference primary ballot. The Secretary of State shall prepare
2728and publish a list of the names of the presidential candidates
2729submitted not later than on the first Tuesday after the first
2730Monday in November of the year preceding the presidential
2731preference primary. The Secretary of State shall submit such
2732list of names of presidential candidates to the selection
2733committee on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in
2734November of the year preceding the presidential preference
2735primary. Each person designated as a presidential candidate
2736shall have his or her name appear, or have his or her delegates'
2737names appear, on the presidential preference primary ballot
2738unless all committee members of the same political party as the
2739candidate agree to delete such candidate's name from the ballot.
2740     (c)  The selection committee shall meet in Tallahassee on
2741the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of the year
2742preceding the presidential preference primary. The selection
2743committee shall publicly announce and submit to the Department
2744of State no later than 5 p.m. on the following day the names of
2745presidential candidates who shall have their names appear, or
2746who are entitled to have their delegates' names appear, on the
2747presidential preference primary ballot. The Department of State
2748shall immediately notify each presidential candidate listed
2749designated by the Secretary of State committee. Such
2750notification shall be in writing, by registered mail, with
2751return receipt requested.
2752     (3)  A candidate's name shall be printed on the
2753presidential preference primary ballot unless the candidate
2754submits to the Department of State, prior to the second Tuesday
2755after the first Monday in November of the year preceding the
2756presidential preference primary, an affidavit stating that he or
2757she is not now, and does not presently intend to become, a
2758candidate for President at the upcoming nominating convention.
2759If a candidate withdraws pursuant to this subsection, the
2760Department of State shall notify the state executive committee
2761that the candidate's name will not be placed on the ballot. The
2762Department of State shall, no later than the third Tuesday after
2763the first Monday in November of the year preceding the
2764presidential preference primary, certify to each supervisor of
2765elections the name of each candidate for political party
2766nomination to be printed on the ballot.
2767     (4)  The names of candidates for political party
2768nominations for President of the United States shall be printed
2769on official ballots for the presidential preference primary
2770election and shall be marked, counted, canvassed, returned, and
2771proclaimed in the same manner and under the same conditions, so
2772far as they are applicable, as in other state elections. If
2773party rule requires the delegates' names to be printed on the
2774official presidential preference primary ballot, the name of the
2775presidential candidates for that political party may not be
2776printed separately, but the ballot may reflect the presidential
2777candidate to whom the delegate is pledged. If, however, a
2778political party has only one presidential candidate, neither the
2779name of the candidate nor the names of the candidate's delegates
2780shall be printed on the ballot.
2781     (5)  The state executive committee of each party, by rule
2782adopted at least 60 120 days prior to the presidential
2783preference primary election, shall determine the number, and
2784establish procedures to be followed in the selection, of
2785delegates and delegate alternates from among each candidate's
2786supporters. A copy of any rule adopted by the executive
2787committee shall be filed with the Department of State within 7
2788days after its adoption and shall become a public record. The
2789Department of State shall review the procedures and shall notify
2790the state executive committee of each political party of any
2791ballot limitations. The Department of State may promulgate rules
2792for the orderly conduct of the presidential preference primary
2793ballot.
2794     (6)  Delegates must qualify no later than the second Friday
2795in November of the year preceding the presidential preference
2796primary in the manner provided by party rule.
2797     (7)  All delegates shall be allocated as provided by party
2798rule.
2799     (6)(8)  All names of candidates or delegates shall be
2800listed as directed by the Department of State.
2801     Section 48.  Section 103.141, Florida Statutes, is amended
2802to read:
2803     103.141  Removal of county executive committee member for
2804violation of oath.-
2805     (1)  If Where the county executive committee by at least a
2806two-thirds majority vote of the members of the committee,
2807attending a meeting held after due notice has been given and at
2808which meeting a quorum is present, determines an incumbent
2809county executive committee member is to be guilty of an offense
2810involving a violation of the member's oath of office, the said
2811member so violating his or her oath shall be removed from office
2812and the office shall be deemed vacant. Provided, However, if the
2813county committee wrongfully removes a county committee member
2814and the committee member so wrongfully removed files suit in the
2815circuit court alleging his or her removal was wrongful and wins
2816the said suit, the committee member shall be restored to office
2817and the county committee shall pay the costs incurred by the
2818wrongfully removed committee member in bringing the suit,
2819including reasonable attorney's fees.
2820     (2)  Any officer, county committeeman, county
2821committeewoman, precinct committeeman, precinct committeewoman,
2822or member of a county executive committee may be removed from
2823office pursuant to s. 103.161.
2824     Section 49.  Section 103.161, Florida Statutes, is
2825repealed.
2826     Section 50.  Section 104.29, Florida Statutes, is amended
2827to read:
2828     104.29  Inspectors refusing to allow watchers while ballots
2829are counted.-The inspectors or other election officials at the
2830polling place shall, after the polls close at all times while
2831the ballots are being counted, allow as many as three persons
2832near to them to see whether the ballots are being reconciled
2833correctly. read and called and the votes correctly tallied, and
2834Any official who denies this privilege or interferes therewith
2835commits is guilty of a misdemeanor of the first degree,
2836punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
2837     Section 51.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (4) of section
2838105.031, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
2839     105.031  Qualification; filing fee; candidate's oath; items
2840required to be filed.-
2841     (4)  CANDIDATE'S OATH.-
2842     (b)  All candidates for judicial office shall subscribe to
2843an oath or affirmation in writing to be filed with the
2844appropriate qualifying officer upon qualifying. A printed copy
2845of the oath or affirmation shall be furnished to the candidate
2846by the qualifying officer and shall be in substantially the
2847following form:
2848
2849State of Florida
2850County of ....
2851     Before me, an officer authorized to administer oaths,
2852personally appeared ...(please print name as you wish it to
2853appear on the ballot)..., to me well known, who, being sworn,
2854says he or she: is a candidate for the judicial office of ....;
2855that his or her legal residence is .... County, Florida; that he
2856or she is a qualified elector of the state and of the
2857territorial jurisdiction of the court to which he or she seeks
2858election; that he or she is qualified under the constitution and
2859laws of Florida to hold the judicial office to which he or she
2860desires to be elected or in which he or she desires to be
2861retained; that he or she has taken the oath required by ss.
2862876.05-876.10, Florida Statutes; that he or she has qualified
2863for no other public office in the state, the term of which
2864office or any part thereof runs concurrent to the office he or
2865she seeks; and that he or she has resigned from any office which
2866he or she is required to resign pursuant to s. 99.012, Florida
2867Statutes; and that he or she will support the Constitution of
2868the United States and the Constitution of the State of Florida.
2869
2870     ...(Signature of candidate)...
2871     ...(Address)...
2872
2873Sworn to and subscribed before me this .... day of ....,
2874...(year)..., at .... County, Florida.
2875
2876...(Signature and title of officer administering oath)...
2877     Section 52.  Subsection (3), paragraph (b) of subsection
2878(5), subsection (15), and paragraph (c) of subsection (16) of
2879section 106.011, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
2880     106.011  Definitions.-As used in this chapter, the
2881following terms have the following meanings unless the context
2882clearly indicates otherwise:
2883     (3)  "Contribution" means:
2884     (a)  A gift, subscription, conveyance, deposit, loan,
2885payment, or distribution of money or anything of value,
2886including contributions in kind having an attributable monetary
2887value in any form, made for the purpose of influencing the
2888results of an election or making an electioneering
2889communication.
2890     (b)  A transfer of funds between political committees,
2891between committees of continuous existence, between
2892electioneering communications organizations, or between any
2893combination of these groups.
2894     (c)  The payment, by any person other than a candidate or
2895political committee, of compensation for the personal services
2896of another person which are rendered to a candidate or political
2897committee without charge to the candidate or committee for such
2898services.
2899     (d)  The transfer of funds by a campaign treasurer or
2900deputy campaign treasurer between a primary depository and a
2901separate interest-bearing account or certificate of deposit, and
2902the term includes any interest earned on such account or
2903certificate.
2904
2905Notwithstanding the foregoing meanings of "contribution," the
2906term may word shall not be construed to include services,
2907including, but not limited to, legal and accounting services,
2908provided without compensation by individuals volunteering a
2909portion or all of their time on behalf of a candidate or
2910political committee. This definition shall not be construed to
2911include editorial endorsements.
2912     (5)
2913     (b)  An expenditure for the purpose of expressly advocating
2914the election or defeat of a candidate which is made by the
2915national, state, or county executive committee of a political
2916party, including any subordinate committee of a national, state,
2917or county committee of a political party, or by any political
2918committee or committee of continuous existence, or any other
2919person, shall not be considered an independent expenditure if
2920the committee or person:
2921     1.  Communicates with the candidate, the candidate's
2922campaign, or an agent of the candidate acting on behalf of the
2923candidate, including any pollster, media consultant, advertising
2924agency, vendor, advisor, or staff member, concerning the
2925preparation of, use of, or payment for, the specific expenditure
2926or advertising campaign at issue; or
2927     2.  Makes a payment in cooperation, consultation, or
2928concert with, at the request or suggestion of, or pursuant to
2929any general or particular understanding with the candidate, the
2930candidate's campaign, a political committee supporting the
2931candidate, or an agent of the candidate relating to the specific
2932expenditure or advertising campaign at issue; or
2933     3.  Makes a payment for the dissemination, distribution, or
2934republication, in whole or in part, of any broadcast or any
2935written, graphic, or other form of campaign material prepared by
2936the candidate, the candidate's campaign, or an agent of the
2937candidate, including any pollster, media consultant, advertising
2938agency, vendor, advisor, or staff member; or
2939     4.  Makes a payment based on information about the
2940candidate's plans, projects, or needs communicated to a member
2941of the committee or person by the candidate or an agent of the
2942candidate, provided the committee or person uses the information
2943in any way, in whole or in part, either directly or indirectly,
2944to design, prepare, or pay for the specific expenditure or
2945advertising campaign at issue; or
2946     5.  After the last day of the qualifying period prescribed
2947for the candidate for statewide or legislative office, consults
2948about the candidate's plans, projects, or needs in connection
2949with the candidate's pursuit of election to office and the
2950information is used in any way to plan, create, design, or
2951prepare an independent expenditure or advertising campaign,
2952with:
2953     a.  Any officer, director, employee, or agent of a
2954national, state, or county executive committee of a political
2955party that has made or intends to make expenditures in
2956connection with or contributions to the candidate; or
2957     b.  Any person whose professional services have been
2958retained by a national, state, or county executive committee of
2959a political party that has made or intends to make expenditures
2960in connection with or contributions to the candidate; or
2961     6.  After the last day of the qualifying period prescribed
2962for the candidate for statewide or legislative office, retains
2963the professional services of any person also providing those
2964services to the candidate in connection with the candidate's
2965pursuit of election to office; or
2966     7.  Arranges, coordinates, or directs the expenditure, in
2967any way, with the candidate or an agent of the candidate.
2968     (15)  "Unopposed candidate" means a candidate for
2969nomination or election to an office who, after the last day on
2970which any person, including a write-in candidate, may qualify,
2971is without opposition in the election at which the office is to
2972be filled or who is without such opposition after such date as a
2973result of any primary election or of withdrawal by other
2974candidates seeking the same office. A candidate is not an
2975unopposed candidate if there is a vacancy to be filled under s.
2976100.111(3) s. 100.111(4), if there is a legal proceeding pending
2977regarding the right to a ballot position for the office sought
2978by the candidate, or if the candidate is seeking retention as a
2979justice or judge.
2980     (16)  "Candidate" means any person to whom any one or more
2981of the following apply:
2982     (c)  Any person who receives contributions or makes
2983expenditures, or consents for any other person to receive
2984contributions or make expenditures, with a view to bring about
2985his or her nomination or election to, or retention in, public
2986office. However, this definition does not include any candidate
2987for a political party executive committee. Expenditures related
2988to potential candidate polls as provided in s. 106.17 are not
2989contributions or expenditures for purposes of this subsection.
2990     Section 53.  Subsection (3) of section 106.021, Florida
2991Statutes, is amended to read:
2992     106.021  Campaign treasurers; deputies; primary and
2993secondary depositories.-
2994     (3)  No contribution or expenditure, including
2995contributions or expenditures of a candidate or of the
2996candidate's family, shall be directly or indirectly made or
2997received in furtherance of the candidacy of any person for
2998nomination or election to political office in the state or on
2999behalf of any political committee except through the duly
3000appointed campaign treasurer of the candidate or political
3001committee, subject to the following exceptions:
3002     (a)  Independent expenditures;
3003     (b)  Reimbursements to a candidate or any other individual
3004for expenses incurred in connection with the campaign or
3005activities of the political committee by a check drawn upon the
3006campaign account and reported pursuant to s. 106.07(4). After
3007July 1, 2004, The full name and address of each person to whom
3008the candidate or other individual made payment for which
3009reimbursement was made by check drawn upon the campaign account
3010shall be reported pursuant to s. 106.07(4), together with the
3011purpose of such payment;
3012     (c)  Expenditures made indirectly through a treasurer for
3013goods or services, such as communications media placement or
3014procurement services, campaign signs, insurance, or other
3015expenditures that include multiple integral components as part
3016of the expenditure and reported pursuant to s. 106.07(4)(a)13.;
3017or
3018     (d)  Expenditures made directly by any political committee
3019or political party regulated by chapter 103 for obtaining time,
3020space, or services in or by any communications medium for the
3021purpose of jointly endorsing three or more candidates, and any
3022such expenditure shall not be considered a contribution or
3023expenditure to or on behalf of any such candidates for the
3024purposes of this chapter.
3025     Section 54.  Section 106.022, Florida Statutes, is amended
3026to read:
3027     106.022  Appointment of a registered agent; duties.-
3028     (1)  Each political committee, committee of continuous
3029existence, or electioneering communications organization shall
3030have and continuously maintain in this state a registered office
3031and a registered agent and must file with the filing officer
3032division a statement of appointment for the registered office
3033and registered agent. The statement of appointment must:
3034     (a)  Provide the name of the registered agent and the
3035street address and phone number for the registered office;
3036     (b)  Identify the entity for whom the registered agent
3037serves;
3038     (c)  Designate the address the registered agent wishes to
3039use to receive mail;
3040     (d)  Include the entity's undertaking to inform the filing
3041officer division of any change in such designated address;
3042     (e)  Provide for the registered agent's acceptance of the
3043appointment, which must confirm that the registered agent is
3044familiar with and accepts the obligations of the position as set
3045forth in this section; and
3046     (f)  Contain the signature of the registered agent and the
3047entity engaging the registered agent.
3048     (2)  An entity may change its appointment of registered
3049agent and registered office under this section by executing a
3050written statement of change and filing it with the filing
3051officer. The statement must satisfy that identifies the former
3052registered agent and registered address and also satisfies all
3053of the requirements of subsection (1).
3054     (3)  A registered agent may resign his or her appointment
3055as registered agent by executing a written statement of
3056resignation and filing it with the filing officer division. An
3057entity without a registered agent may not make expenditures or
3058accept contributions until it files a written statement of
3059change as required in subsection (2).
3060     Section 55.  Subsection (1) of section 106.023, Florida
3061Statutes, is amended to read:
3062     106.023  Statement of candidate.-
3063     (1)  Each candidate must file a statement with the
3064qualifying officer within 10 days after filing the appointment
3065of campaign treasurer and designation of campaign depository,
3066stating that the candidate has read and understands the
3067requirements of this chapter. Such statement shall be provided
3068by the filing officer and shall be in substantially the
3069following form:
3070
3071
STATEMENT OF CANDIDATE
3072
3073     I, ...., candidate for the office of ...., have been
3074provided access to received, read, and understand the
3075requirements of Chapter 106, Florida Statutes.
3076
3077...(Signature of candidate)...     ...(Date)...
3078
3079Willful failure to file this form is a violation of ss.
3080106.19(1)(c) and 106.25(3), F.S.
3081     Section 56.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section
3082106.025, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
3083     106.025  Campaign fund raisers.-
3084     (1)
3085     (c)  Any tickets or advertising for such a campaign fund
3086raiser is exempt from the requirements of s. 106.143 shall
3087contain the following statement: "The purchase of a ticket for,
3088or a contribution to, the campaign fund raiser is a contribution
3089to the campaign of ...(name of the candidate for whose benefit
3090the campaign fund raiser is held)...." Such tickets or
3091advertising shall also comply with other provisions of this
3092chapter relating to political advertising.
3093     Section 57.  Subsection (1) and paragraph (d) of subsection
3094(3) of section 106.03, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
3095     106.03  Registration of political committees and
3096electioneering communications organizations.-
3097     (1)(a)  Each political committee that receives anticipates
3098receiving contributions or makes making expenditures during a
3099calendar year in an aggregate amount exceeding $500 or that
3100seeks is seeking the signatures of registered electors in
3101support of an initiative shall file a statement of organization
3102as provided in subsection (3) within 10 days after its
3103organization or, if later, within 10 days after the date on
3104which it has information that causes the committee to anticipate
3105that it will receive contributions or make expenditures in
3106excess of $500. If a political committee is organized within 10
3107days of any election, it shall immediately file the statement of
3108organization required by this section.
3109     (b)1.  Each group electioneering communications
3110organization that receives contributions or makes expenditures
3111during a calendar year in an aggregate amount exceeding $5,000
3112shall file a statement of organization as an electioneering
3113communications organization provided in subparagraph 2. by
3114expedited delivery within 24 hours after its organization or, if
3115later, within 24 hours after the date on which it receives
3116contributions or makes expenditures for an electioneering
3117communication in excess of $5,000, if such expenditures are made
3118within the timeframes specified in s. 106.011(18)(a)2. If the
3119group makes expenditures for an electioneering communication in
3120excess of $5,000 before the timeframes specified in s.
3121106.011(18)(a)2., it shall file the statement of organization
3122within 24 hours after the 30th day before a primary or special
3123primary election, or within 24 hours after the 60th day before
3124any other election, whichever is applicable.
3125     2.a.  In a statewide, legislative, or multicounty election,
3126an electioneering communications organization shall file a
3127statement of organization with the Division of Elections.
3128     b.  In a countywide election or any election held on less
3129than a countywide basis, except as described in sub-subparagraph
3130c., an electioneering communications organization shall file a
3131statement of organization with the supervisor of elections of
3132the county in which the election is being held.
3133     c.  In a municipal election, an electioneering
3134communications organization shall file a statement of
3135organization with the officer before whom municipal candidates
3136qualify.
3137     d.  Any electioneering communications organization that
3138would be required to file a statement of organization in two or
3139more locations by reason of the organization's intention to
3140support or oppose candidates at state or multicounty and local
3141levels of government need only file a statement of organization
3142with the Division of Elections.
3143     (3)
3144     (d)  Any political committee which would be required under
3145this subsection to file a statement of organization in two or
3146more locations by reason of the committee's intention to support
3147or oppose candidates or issues at state or multicounty and local
3148levels of government need file only with the Division of
3149Elections.
3150     Section 58.  Subsection (4) of section 106.04, Florida
3151Statutes, is amended, present subsections (7) and (8) of that
3152section are amended and renumbered as subsections (8) and (9),
3153respectively, and a new subsection (7) is added to that section,
3154to read:
3155     106.04  Committees of continuous existence.-
3156     (4)(a)  Each committee of continuous existence shall file
3157an annual report with the Division of Elections during the month
3158of January. Such annual reports shall contain the same
3159information and shall be accompanied by the same materials as
3160original applications filed pursuant to subsection (2). However,
3161the charter or bylaws need not be filed if the annual report is
3162accompanied by a sworn statement by the chair that no changes
3163have been made to such charter or bylaws since the last filing.
3164     (b)1.  Each committee of continuous existence shall file
3165regular reports with the Division of Elections at the same times
3166and subject to the same filing conditions as are established by
3167s. 106.07(1) and (2) for candidates' reports. In addition, when
3168a special election is called to fill a vacancy in office, a
3169committee of continuous existence that makes a contribution or
3170expenditure to influence the results of such special election or
3171the preceding special primary election must file campaign
3172finance reports with the filing officer on the dates set by the
3173Department of State pursuant to s. 100.111.
3174     2.  Any committee of continuous existence failing to so
3175file a report with the Division of Elections or applicable
3176filing officer pursuant to this paragraph on the designated due
3177date shall be subject to a fine for late filing as provided by
3178this section.
3179     (c)  All committees of continuous existence shall file
3180their reports with the Division of Elections. Reports shall be
3181filed in accordance with s. 106.0705 and shall contain the
3182following information:
3183     1.  The full name, address, and occupation of each person
3184who has made one or more contributions, including contributions
3185that represent the payment of membership dues, to the committee
3186during the reporting period, together with the amounts and dates
3187of such contributions. For corporations, the report must provide
3188as clear a description as practicable of the principal type of
3189business conducted by the corporation. However, if the
3190contribution is $100 or less, the occupation of the contributor
3191or principal type of business need not be listed. However, for
3192any contributions that represent the payment of dues by members
3193in a fixed amount aggregating no more than $250 per calendar
3194year, pursuant to the schedule on file with the Division of
3195Elections, only the aggregate amount of such contributions need
3196be listed, together with the number of members paying such dues
3197and the amount of the membership dues.
3198     2.  The name and address of each political committee or
3199committee of continuous existence from which the reporting
3200committee received, or the name and address of each political
3201committee, committee of continuous existence, or political party
3202to which it made, any transfer of funds, together with the
3203amounts and dates of all transfers.
3204     3.  Any other receipt of funds not listed pursuant to
3205subparagraph 1. or subparagraph 2., including the sources and
3206amounts of all such funds.
3207     4.  The name and address of, and office sought by, each
3208candidate to whom the committee has made a contribution during
3209the reporting period, together with the amount and date of each
3210contribution.
3211     5.  The full name and address of each person to whom
3212expenditures have been made by or on behalf of the committee
3213within the reporting period; the amount, date, and purpose of
3214each such expenditure; and the name and address, and office
3215sought by, each candidate on whose behalf such expenditure was
3216made.
3217     6.  The full name and address of each person to whom an
3218expenditure for personal services, salary, or reimbursement for
3219authorized expenses has been made, including the full name and
3220address of each entity to whom the person made payment for which
3221reimbursement was made by check drawn upon the committee
3222account, together with the amount and purpose of such payment.
3223     7.  Transaction information from each credit card purchase
3224statement that will be included in the next report following
3225receipt thereof by the committee. Receipts for each credit card
3226purchase shall be retained by the treasurer with the records for
3227the committee account.
3228     8.  The total sum of expenditures made by the committee
3229during the reporting period.
3230     (d)  The treasurer of each committee shall certify as to
3231the correctness of each report and shall bear the responsibility
3232for its accuracy and veracity. Any treasurer who willfully
3233certifies to the correctness of a report while knowing that such
3234report is incorrect, false, or incomplete commits a misdemeanor
3235of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s.
3236775.083.
3237     (7)  Any change in information previously submitted to the
3238division shall be reported within 10 days following the change.
3239     (8)(7)  If a committee of continuous existence ceases to
3240meet the criteria prescribed by subsection (1), the Division of
3241Elections shall revoke its certification until such time as the
3242criteria are again met. The Division of Elections shall adopt
3243promulgate rules to prescribe the manner in which the such
3244certification of a committee of continuous existence shall be
3245revoked. Such rules shall, at a minimum, provide for:
3246     (a)  Notice, which must shall contain the facts and conduct
3247that warrant the intended action.
3248     (b)  Adequate opportunity to respond.
3249     (c)  Appeal of the decision to the Florida Elections
3250Commission. Such appeals are shall be exempt from the
3251confidentiality provisions of s. 106.25.
3252     (9)(8)(a)  Any committee of continuous existence failing to
3253file a report on the designated due date is shall be subject to
3254a fine. The fine shall be $50 per day for the first 3 days late
3255and, thereafter, $500 per day for each late day, not to exceed
325625 percent of the total receipts or expenditures, whichever is
3257greater, for the period covered by the late report. However, for
3258the reports immediately preceding each primary and general
3259election, including a special primary election and a special
3260general election, the fine shall be $500 per day for each late
3261day, not to exceed 25 percent of the total receipts or
3262expenditures, whichever is greater, for the period covered by
3263the late report. The fine shall be assessed by the filing
3264officer, and the moneys collected shall be deposited into:
3265     1.  In The General Revenue Fund, in the case of fines
3266collected by the Division of Elections.
3267     2.  The general revenue fund of the political subdivision,
3268in the case of fines collected by a county or municipal filing
3269officer. No separate fine shall be assessed for failure to file
3270a copy of any report required by this section.
3271     (b)  Upon determining that a report is late, the filing
3272officer shall immediately notify the treasurer of the committee
3273or the committee's registered agent as to the failure to file a
3274report by the designated due date and that a fine is being
3275assessed for each late day. Upon receipt of the report, the
3276filing officer shall determine the amount of fine which is due
3277and shall notify the treasurer of the committee. Notice is
3278deemed complete upon proof of delivery of written notice to the
3279mailing or street address on record with the filing officer. The
3280filing officer shall determine the amount of the fine due based
3281upon the earliest of the following:
3282     1.  When the report is actually received by such officer.
3283     2.  When the report is postmarked.
3284     3.  When the certificate of mailing is dated.
3285     4.  When the receipt from an established courier company is
3286dated.
3287
3288Such fine shall be paid to the filing officer within 20 days
3289after receipt of the notice of payment due, unless appeal is
3290made to the Florida Elections Commission pursuant to paragraph
3291(c). An officer or member of a committee is shall not be
3292personally liable for such fine.
3293     (c)  Any treasurer of a committee may appeal or dispute the
3294fine, based upon unusual circumstances surrounding the failure
3295to file on the designated due date, and may request and is shall
3296be entitled to a hearing before the Florida Elections
3297Commission, which may shall have the authority to waive the fine
3298in whole or in part. Any such request must shall be made within
329920 days after receipt of the notice of payment due. In such
3300case, the treasurer of The committee shall file the appeal with
3301, within the 20-day period, notify the filing officer in writing
3302of his or her intention to bring the matter before the
3303commission, with a copy provided to the filing officer.
3304     (d)  The filing officer shall notify the Florida Elections
3305Commission of the repeated late filing by a committee of
3306continuous existence, the failure of a committee of continuous
3307existence to file a report after notice, or the failure to pay
3308the fine imposed.
3309     Section 59.  Section 106.07, Florida Statutes, is amended
3310to read:
3311     106.07  Reports; certification and filing.-
3312     (1)  Each campaign treasurer designated by a candidate or
3313political committee pursuant to s. 106.021 shall file regular
3314reports of all contributions received, and all expenditures
3315made, by or on behalf of such candidate or political committee.
3316Except for the third calendar quarter immediately preceding a
3317general election, reports shall be filed on the 10th day
3318following the end of each calendar quarter from the time the
3319campaign treasurer is appointed, except that, if the 10th day
3320following the end of a calendar quarter occurs on a Saturday,
3321Sunday, or legal holiday, the report shall be filed on the next
3322following day which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.
3323Quarterly reports shall include all contributions received and
3324expenditures made during the calendar quarter which have not
3325otherwise been reported pursuant to this section.
3326     (a)  Except as provided in paragraph (b), following the
3327last day of qualifying for office, the reports shall also be
3328filed on the 32nd, 18th, and 4th days immediately preceding the
3329primary and on the 46th, 32nd, 18th, and 4th days immediately
3330preceding the election, for a candidate who is opposed in
3331seeking nomination or election to any office, for a political
3332committee, or for a committee of continuous existence.
3333     (b)  Following the last day of qualifying for office, Any
3334statewide candidate who has requested to receive contributions
3335pursuant to from the Florida Election Campaign Financing Act
3336Trust Fund or any statewide candidate in a race with a candidate
3337who has requested to receive contributions pursuant to from the
3338act trust fund shall also file reports on the 4th, 11th, 18th,
333925th, and 32nd days prior to the primary election, and on the
33404th, 11th, 18th, 25th, 32nd, 39th, 46th, and 53rd days prior to
3341the general election.
3342     (c)  Following the last day of qualifying for office, any
3343unopposed candidate need only file a report within 90 days after
3344the date such candidate became unopposed. Such report shall
3345contain all previously unreported contributions and expenditures
3346as required by this section and shall reflect disposition of
3347funds as required by s. 106.141.
3348     (d)1.  When a special election is called to fill a vacancy
3349in office, all political committees and committees of continuous
3350existence making contributions or expenditures to influence the
3351results of such special election or the preceding special
3352primary election shall file campaign treasurers' reports with
3353the filing officer on the dates set by the Department of State
3354pursuant to s. 100.111.
3355     2.  When an election is called for an issue to appear on
3356the ballot at a time when no candidates are scheduled to appear
3357on the ballot, all political committees making contributions or
3358expenditures in support of or in opposition to such issue shall
3359file reports on the 18th and 4th days prior to such election.
3360     (e)  The filing officer shall provide each candidate with a
3361schedule designating the beginning and end of reporting periods
3362as well as the corresponding designated due dates.
3363     (2)(a)1.  All reports required of a candidate by this
3364section shall be filed with the officer before whom the
3365candidate is required by law to qualify. All candidates who file
3366with the Department of State shall file their reports pursuant
3367to s. 106.0705. Except as provided in s. 106.0705, reports shall
3368be filed not later than 5 p.m. of the day designated; however,
3369any report postmarked by the United States Postal Service no
3370later than midnight of the day designated shall be deemed to
3371have been filed in a timely manner. Any report received by the
3372filing officer within 5 days after the designated due date that
3373was delivered by the United States Postal Service shall be
3374deemed timely filed unless it has a postmark that indicates that
3375the report was mailed after the designated due date. A
3376certificate of mailing obtained from and dated by the United
3377States Postal Service at the time of mailing, or a receipt from
3378an established courier company, which bears a date on or before
3379the date on which the report is due, shall be proof of mailing
3380in a timely manner. Reports shall contain information of all
3381previously unreported contributions received and expenditures
3382made as of the preceding Friday, except that the report filed on
3383the Friday immediately preceding the election shall contain
3384information of all previously unreported contributions received
3385and expenditures made as of the day preceding that designated
3386due date. All such reports shall be open to public inspection.
3387     2.  This subsection does not prohibit the governing body of
3388a political subdivision, by ordinance or resolution, from
3389imposing upon its own officers and candidates electronic filing
3390requirements not in conflict with s. 106.0705. Expenditure of
3391public funds for such purpose is deemed to be for a valid public
3392purpose.
3393     (b)1.  Any report that which is deemed to be incomplete by
3394the officer with whom the candidate qualifies shall be accepted
3395on a conditional basis., and The campaign treasurer shall be
3396notified by certified registered mail or by another method using
3397a common carrier that provides a proof of delivery of the notice
3398as to why the report is incomplete and within 7 be given 3 days
3399after from receipt of such notice must to file an addendum to
3400the report providing all information necessary to complete the
3401report in compliance with this section. Failure to file a
3402complete report after such notice constitutes a violation of
3403this chapter.
3404     2.  Notice is deemed complete upon proof of delivery of a
3405written notice to the mailing or street address of the campaign
3406treasurer or registered agent of record with the filing officer.
3407In lieu of the notice by registered mail as required in
3408subparagraph 1., the qualifying officer may notify the campaign
3409treasurer by telephone that the report is incomplete and request
3410the information necessary to complete the report. If, however,
3411such information is not received by the qualifying officer
3412within 3 days after the telephone request therefor, notice shall
3413be sent by registered mail as provided in subparagraph 1.
3414     (3)  Reports required of a political committee shall be
3415filed with the agency or officer before whom such committee
3416registers pursuant to s. 106.03(3) and shall be subject to the
3417same filing conditions as established for candidates' reports.
3418Incomplete reports by political committees shall be treated in
3419the manner provided for incomplete reports by candidates in
3420subsection (2).
3421     (4)(a)  Each report required by this section must shall
3422contain:
3423     1.  The full name, address, and occupation, if any of each
3424person who has made one or more contributions to or for such
3425committee or candidate within the reporting period, together
3426with the amount and date of such contributions. For
3427corporations, the report must provide as clear a description as
3428practicable of the principal type of business conducted by the
3429corporation. However, if the contribution is $100 or less or is
3430from a relative, as defined in s. 112.312, provided that the
3431relationship is reported, the occupation of the contributor or
3432the principal type of business need not be listed.
3433     2.  The name and address of each political committee from
3434which the reporting committee or the candidate received, or to
3435which the reporting committee or candidate made, any transfer of
3436funds, together with the amounts and dates of all transfers.
3437     3.  Each loan for campaign purposes to or from any person
3438or political committee within the reporting period, together
3439with the full names, addresses, and occupations, and principal
3440places of business, if any, of the lender and endorsers, if any,
3441and the date and amount of such loans.
3442     4.  A statement of each contribution, rebate, refund, or
3443other receipt not otherwise listed under subparagraphs 1.
3444through 3.
3445     5.  The total sums of all loans, in-kind contributions, and
3446other receipts by or for such committee or candidate during the
3447reporting period. The reporting forms shall be designed to
3448elicit separate totals for in-kind contributions, loans, and
3449other receipts.
3450     6.  The full name and address of each person to whom
3451expenditures have been made by or on behalf of the committee or
3452candidate within the reporting period; the amount, date, and
3453purpose of each such expenditure; and the name and address of,
3454and office sought by, each candidate on whose behalf such
3455expenditure was made. However, expenditures made from the petty
3456cash fund provided by s. 106.12 need not be reported
3457individually.
3458     7.  The full name and address of each person to whom an
3459expenditure for personal services, salary, or reimbursement for
3460authorized expenses as provided in s. 106.021(3) has been made
3461and which is not otherwise reported, including the amount, date,
3462and purpose of such expenditure. However, expenditures made from
3463the petty cash fund provided for in s. 106.12 need not be
3464reported individually. Receipts for reimbursement for authorized
3465expenditures shall be retained by the treasurer along with the
3466records for the campaign account.
3467     8.  The total amount withdrawn and the total amount spent
3468for petty cash purposes pursuant to this chapter during the
3469reporting period.
3470     9.  The total sum of expenditures made by such committee or
3471candidate during the reporting period.
3472     10.  The amount and nature of debts and obligations owed by
3473or to the committee or candidate, which relate to the conduct of
3474any political campaign.
3475     11.  Transaction information for each credit card purchase.
3476A copy of each credit card statement which shall be included in
3477the next report following receipt thereof by the candidate or
3478political committee. Receipts for each credit card purchase
3479shall be retained by the treasurer with the records for the
3480campaign account.
3481     12.  The amount and nature of any separate interest-bearing
3482accounts or certificates of deposit and identification of the
3483financial institution in which such accounts or certificates of
3484deposit are located.
3485     13.  The primary purposes of an expenditure made indirectly
3486through a campaign treasurer pursuant to s. 106.021(3) for goods
3487and services such as communications media placement or
3488procurement services, campaign signs, insurance, and other
3489expenditures that include multiple components as part of the
3490expenditure. The primary purpose of an expenditure shall be that
3491purpose, including integral and directly related components,
3492that comprises 80 percent of such expenditure.
3493     (b)  The filing officer shall make available to any
3494candidate or committee a reporting form which the candidate or
3495committee may use to indicate contributions received by the
3496candidate or committee but returned to the contributor before
3497deposit.
3498     (5)  The candidate and his or her campaign treasurer, in
3499the case of a candidate, or the political committee chair and
3500campaign treasurer of the committee, in the case of a political
3501committee, shall certify as to the correctness of each report;
3502and each person so certifying shall bear the responsibility for
3503the accuracy and veracity of each report. Any campaign
3504treasurer, candidate, or political committee chair who willfully
3505certifies the correctness of any report while knowing that such
3506report is incorrect, false, or incomplete commits a misdemeanor
3507of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s.
3508775.083.
3509     (6)  The campaign depository shall return all checks drawn
3510on the account to the campaign treasurer who shall retain the
3511records pursuant to s. 106.06. The records maintained by the
3512campaign depository with respect to any campaign account
3513regulated by this chapter are such account shall be subject to
3514inspection by an agent of the Division of Elections or the
3515Florida Elections Commission at any time during normal banking
3516hours, and such depository shall furnish certified copies of any
3517of such records to the Division of Elections or Florida
3518Elections Commission upon request.
3519     (7)  Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter,
3520in any reporting period during which a candidate, political
3521committee, or committee of continuous existence has not received
3522funds, made any contributions, or expended any reportable funds,
3523the filing of the required report for that period is waived.
3524However, the next report filed must specify that the report
3525covers the entire period between the last submitted report and
3526the report being filed, and any candidate, political committee,
3527or committee of continuous existence not reporting by virtue of
3528this subsection on dates prescribed elsewhere in this chapter
3529shall notify the filing officer in writing on the prescribed
3530reporting date that no report is being filed on that date.
3531     (8)(a)  Any candidate or political committee failing to
3532file a report on the designated due date is shall be subject to
3533a fine as provided in paragraph (b) for each late day, and, in
3534the case of a candidate, such fine shall be paid only from
3535personal funds of the candidate. The fine shall be assessed by
3536the filing officer and the moneys collected shall be deposited:
3537     1.  In the General Revenue Fund, in the case of a candidate
3538for state office or a political committee that registers with
3539the Division of Elections; or
3540     2.  In the general revenue fund of the political
3541subdivision, in the case of a candidate for an office of a
3542political subdivision or a political committee that registers
3543with an officer of a political subdivision.
3544
3545No separate fine shall be assessed for failure to file a copy of
3546any report required by this section.
3547     (b)  Upon determining that a report is late, the filing
3548officer shall immediately notify the candidate or chair of the
3549political committee as to the failure to file a report by the
3550designated due date and that a fine is being assessed for each
3551late day. The fine shall be $50 per day for the first 3 days
3552late and, thereafter, $500 per day for each late day, not to
3553exceed 25 percent of the total receipts or expenditures,
3554whichever is greater, for the period covered by the late report.
3555However, for the reports immediately preceding each special
3556primary election, special election, primary election, and
3557general election, the fine shall be $500 per day for each late
3558day, not to exceed 25 percent of the total receipts or
3559expenditures, whichever is greater, for the period covered by
3560the late report. For reports required under s. 106.141(7), the
3561fine is $50 per day for each late day, not to exceed 25 percent
3562of the total receipts or expenditures, whichever is greater, for
3563the period covered by the late report. Upon receipt of the
3564report, the filing officer shall determine the amount of the
3565fine which is due and shall notify the candidate or chair or
3566registered agent of the political committee. The filing officer
3567shall determine the amount of the fine due based upon the
3568earliest of the following:
3569     1.  When the report is actually received by such officer.
3570     2.  When the report is postmarked.
3571     3.  When the certificate of mailing is dated.
3572     4.  When the receipt from an established courier company is
3573dated.
3574     5.  When the electronic receipt issued pursuant to s.
3575106.0705 or other electronic filing system authorized in this
3576section is dated.
3577
3578Such fine shall be paid to the filing officer within 20 days
3579after receipt of the notice of payment due, unless appeal is
3580made to the Florida Elections Commission pursuant to paragraph
3581(c). Notice is deemed complete upon proof of delivery of written
3582notice to the mailing or street address on record with the
3583filing officer. In the case of a candidate, such fine shall not
3584be an allowable campaign expenditure and shall be paid only from
3585personal funds of the candidate. An officer or member of a
3586political committee shall not be personally liable for such
3587fine.
3588     (c)  Any candidate or chair of a political committee may
3589appeal or dispute the fine, based upon, but not limited to,
3590unusual circumstances surrounding the failure to file on the
3591designated due date, and may request and shall be entitled to a
3592hearing before the Florida Elections Commission, which shall
3593have the authority to waive the fine in whole or in part. The
3594Florida Elections Commission must consider the mitigating and
3595aggravating circumstances contained in s. 106.265(1) when
3596determining the amount of a fine, if any, to be waived. Any such
3597request shall be made within 20 days after receipt of the notice
3598of payment due. In such case, the candidate or chair of the
3599political committee shall, within the 20-day period, notify the
3600filing officer in writing of his or her intention to bring the
3601matter before the commission.
3602     (d)  The appropriate filing officer shall notify the
3603Florida Elections Commission of the repeated late filing by a
3604candidate or political committee, the failure of a candidate or
3605political committee to file a report after notice, or the
3606failure to pay the fine imposed. The commission shall
3607investigate only those alleged late filing violations
3608specifically identified by the filing officer and as set forth
3609in the notification. Any other alleged violations must be
3610separately stated and reported by the division to the commission
3611under s. 106.25(2).
3612     (9)  The Department of State may prescribe by rule the
3613requirements for filing campaign treasurers' reports as set
3614forth in this chapter.
3615     Section 60.  Subsections (8) and (9) of section 106.0703,
3616Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
3617     106.0703  Electioneering communications organizations;
3618reporting requirements; certification and filing; penalties.-
3619     (8)  An electioneering communications organization shall,
3620within 2 days after receiving its initial password or secure
3621sign-on from the Department of State allowing confidential
3622access to the department's electronic campaign finance filing
3623system, electronically file the periodic reports that would have
3624been required pursuant to this section for reportable activities
3625that occurred since the date of the last general election.
3626     (8)(9)  Electioneering communications organizations shall
3627not use credit cards.
3628     Section 61.  Paragraphs (a) and (c) of subsection (2) and
3629subsections (3) and (7) of section 106.0705, Florida Statutes,
3630are amended to read:
3631     106.0705  Electronic filing of campaign treasurer's
3632reports.-
3633     (2)(a)  Each individual candidate who is required to file
3634reports with the division pursuant to s. 106.07 or s. 106.141
3635with the division must file such reports with the division by
3636means of the division's electronic filing system.
3637     (c)  Each person or organization that is required to file
3638reports with the division under s. 106.071 must file such
3639reports with the division by means of the division's electronic
3640filing system.
3641     (3)  Reports filed pursuant to this section shall be
3642completed and filed through the electronic filing system not
3643later than midnight of the day designated. Reports not filed by
3644midnight of the day designated are late filed and are subject to
3645the penalties under s. 106.04(9) s. 106.04(8), s. 106.07(8), s.
3646106.0703(7), or s. 106.29(3), as applicable.
3647     (7)  Notwithstanding anything in law to the contrary, any
3648report required to have been filed under this section for the
3649period ended March 31, 2005, shall be deemed to have been timely
3650filed if the report is filed under this section on or before
3651June 1, 2005.
3652     Section 62.  Subsections (3) and (6) of section 106.08,
3653Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
3654     106.08  Contributions; limitations on.-
3655     (3)(a)  Any contribution received by a candidate with
3656opposition in an election or by the campaign treasurer or a
3657deputy campaign treasurer of such a candidate on the day of that
3658election or less than 5 days prior to the day of that election
3659must be returned by him or her to the person or committee
3660contributing it and may not be used or expended by or on behalf
3661of the candidate.
3662     (b)  Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (c), any
3663contribution received by a candidate or by the campaign
3664treasurer or a deputy campaign treasurer of a candidate after
3665the date at which the candidate withdraws his or her candidacy,
3666or after the date the candidate is defeated, becomes unopposed,
3667or is elected to office must be returned to the person or
3668committee contributing it and may not be used or expended by or
3669on behalf of the candidate.
3670     (c)  With respect to any campaign for an office in which an
3671independent or minor party candidate has filed as required in s.
367299.0955 or s. 99.096, but whose qualification is pending a
3673determination by the Department of State or supervisor of
3674elections as to whether or not the required number of petition
3675signatures was obtained:
3676     1.  The department or supervisor shall, no later than 3
3677days after that determination has been made, notify in writing
3678all other candidates for that office of that determination.
3679     2.  Any contribution received by a candidate or the
3680campaign treasurer or deputy campaign treasurer of a candidate
3681after the candidate has been notified in writing by the
3682department or supervisor that he or she has become unopposed as
3683a result of an independent or minor party candidate failing to
3684obtain the required number of petition signatures shall be
3685returned to the person, political committee, or committee of
3686continuous existence contributing it and shall not be used or
3687expended by or on behalf of the candidate.
3688     (6)(a)  A political party may not accept any contribution
3689that has been specifically designated for the partial or
3690exclusive use of a particular candidate. Any contribution so
3691designated must be returned to the contributor and may not be
3692used or expended by or on behalf of the candidate.
3693     (b)1.  A political party may not accept any in-kind
3694contribution that fails to provide a direct benefit to the
3695political party. A "direct benefit" includes, but is not limited
3696to, fundraising or furthering the objectives of the political
3697party.
3698     2.a.  An in-kind contribution to a state political party
3699may be accepted only by the chairperson of the state political
3700party or by the chairperson's designee or designees whose names
3701are on file with the division in a form acceptable to the
3702division prior to the date of the written notice required in
3703sub-subparagraph b. An in-kind contribution to a county
3704political party may be accepted only by the chairperson of the
3705county political party or by the county chairperson's designee
3706or designees whose names are on file with the supervisor of
3707elections of the respective county prior to the date of the
3708written notice required in sub-subparagraph b.
3709     b.  A person making an in-kind contribution to a state
3710political party or county political party must provide prior
3711written notice of the contribution to a person described in sub-
3712subparagraph a. The prior written notice must be signed and
3713dated and may be provided by an electronic or facsimile message.
3714However, prior written notice is not required for an in-kind
3715contribution that consists of food and beverage in an aggregate
3716amount not exceeding $1,500 which is consumed at a single
3717sitting or event if such in-kind contribution is accepted in
3718advance by a person specified in sub-subparagraph a.
3719     c.  A person described in sub-subparagraph a. may accept an
3720in-kind contribution requiring prior written notice only in a
3721writing that is signed and dated before the in-kind contribution
3722is made. Failure to obtain the required written acceptance of an
3723in-kind contribution to a state or county political party
3724constitutes a refusal of the contribution.
3725     d.  A copy of each prior written acceptance required under
3726sub-subparagraph c. must be filed with the division at the time
3727the regular reports of contributions and expenditures required
3728under s. 106.29 are filed by the state executive committee and
3729county executive committee. A state executive committee and an
3730affiliated party committee must file with the division. A county
3731executive committee must file with the county's supervisor of
3732elections.
3733     e.  An in-kind contribution may not be given to a state or
3734county political party unless the in-kind contribution is made
3735as provided in this subparagraph.
3736     Section 63.  Section 106.09, Florida Statutes, is amended
3737to read:
3738     106.09  Cash contributions and contribution by cashier's
3739checks.-
3740     (1)(a)  A person may not make an aggregate or accept a cash
3741contribution or contribution by means of a cashier's check to
3742the same candidate or committee in excess of $50 per election.
3743     (b)  A person may not accept an aggregate cash contribution
3744or contribution by means of a cashier's check from the same
3745contributor in excess of $50 per election.
3746     (2)(a)  Any person who makes or accepts a contribution in
3747excess of $50 in violation of subsection (1) this section
3748commits a misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as
3749provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
3750     (b)  Any person who knowingly and willfully makes or
3751accepts a contribution in excess of $5,000 in violation of
3752subsection (1) this section commits a felony of the third
3753degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s.
3754775.084.
3755     Section 64.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) and paragraph
3756(a) of subsection (2) of section 106.11, Florida Statutes, are
3757amended, and subsection (6) is added to that section, to read:
3758     106.11  Expenses of and expenditures by candidates and
3759political committees.-Each candidate and each political
3760committee which designates a primary campaign depository
3761pursuant to s. 106.021(1) shall make expenditures from funds on
3762deposit in such primary campaign depository only in the
3763following manner, with the exception of expenditures made from
3764petty cash funds provided by s. 106.12:
3765     (1)
3766     (b)  The checks for such account shall contain, as a
3767minimum, the following information:
3768     1.  The statement "Campaign Account of ...(name of
3769candidate or political committee)... Campaign Account."
3770     2.  The account number and the name of the bank.
3771     3.  The exact amount of the expenditure.
3772     4.  The signature of the campaign treasurer or deputy
3773treasurer.
3774     5.  The exact purpose for which the expenditure is
3775authorized.
3776     6.  The name of the payee.
3777     (2)(a)  For purposes of this section, debit cards are
3778considered bank checks, if:
3779     1.  Debit cards are obtained from the same bank that has
3780been designated as the candidate's or political committee's
3781primary campaign depository.
3782     2.  Debit cards are issued in the name of the treasurer,
3783deputy treasurer, or authorized user and state "Campaign Account
3784of ...(name of candidate or political committee)... Campaign
3785Account."
3786     3.  No more than three debit cards are requested and
3787issued.
3788     4.  Before a debit card is used, a list of all persons
3789authorized to use the card is filed with the division.
3790     5.  All debit cards issued to a candidate's campaign or a
3791political committee expire no later than midnight of the last
3792day of the month of the general election.
3793     4.6.  The person using the debit card does not receive cash
3794as part of, or independent of, any transaction for goods or
3795services.
3796     5.7.  All receipts for debit card transactions contain:
3797     a.  The last four digits of the debit card number.
3798     b.  The exact amount of the expenditure.
3799     c.  The name of the payee.
3800     d.  The signature of the campaign treasurer, deputy
3801treasurer, or authorized user.
3802     e.  The exact purpose for which the expenditure is
3803authorized.
3804
3805Any information required by this subparagraph but not included
3806on the debit card transaction receipt may be handwritten on, or
3807attached to, the receipt by the authorized user before
3808submission to the treasurer.
3809     (6)  A candidate who makes a loan to his or her campaign
3810and reports the loan as required by s. 106.07 may be reimbursed
3811for the loan at any time the campaign account has sufficient
3812funds to repay the loan and satisfy its other obligations.
3813     Section 65.  Subsection (4) of section 106.141, Florida
3814Statutes, is amended to read:
3815     106.141  Disposition of surplus funds by candidates.-
3816     (4)(a)  Except as provided in paragraph (b), any candidate
3817required to dispose of funds pursuant to this section shall, at
3818the option of the candidate, dispose of such funds by any of the
3819following means, or any combination thereof:
3820     1.  Return pro rata to each contributor the funds that have
3821not been spent or obligated.
3822     2.  Donate the funds that have not been spent or obligated
3823to a charitable organization or organizations that meet the
3824qualifications of s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
3825     3.  Give not more than $10,000 of the funds that have not
3826been spent or obligated to the political party of which such
3827candidate is a member, except that a candidate for the Florida
3828Senate may give not more than $30,000 of such funds to the
3829political party of which the candidate is a member.
3830     4.  Give the funds that have not been spent or obligated:
3831     a.  In the case of a candidate for state office, to the
3832state, to be deposited in either the Election Campaign Financing
3833Trust Fund or the General Revenue Fund, as designated by the
3834candidate; or
3835     b.  In the case of a candidate for an office of a political
3836subdivision, to such political subdivision, to be deposited in
3837the general fund thereof.
3838     (b)  Any candidate required to dispose of funds pursuant to
3839this section who has received contributions pursuant to from the
3840Florida Election Campaign Financing Act Trust Fund shall, after
3841all monetary commitments pursuant to s. 106.11(5)(b) and (c)
3842have been met, return all surplus campaign funds to the General
3843Revenue Election Campaign Financing Trust Fund.
3844     Section 66.  Section 106.143, Florida Statutes, is amended
3845to read:
3846     106.143  Political advertisements circulated prior to
3847election; requirements.-
3848     (1)(a)  Any political advertisement that is paid for by a
3849candidate, except a write-in candidate, and that is published,
3850displayed, or circulated before, or on the day of, any election
3851must prominently state:
3852     1.  "Political advertisement paid for and approved by
3853...(name of candidate)..., ...(party affiliation)..., for
3854...(office sought)..."; or
3855     2.  "Paid by ...(name of candidate)..., ...(party
3856affiliation)..., for ...(office sought)...."
3857     (b)  Any political advertisement that is paid for by a
3858write-in candidate and that is published, displayed, or
3859circulated before, or on the day of, any election must
3860prominently state:
3861     1.  "Political advertisement paid for and approved by
3862...(name of candidate)..., write-in candidate, for ...(office
3863sought)..."; or
3864     2.  "Paid by ...(name of candidate)..., write-in candidate,
3865for ...(office sought)...."
3866     (c)(b)  Any other political advertisement published,
3867displayed, or circulated before, or on the day of, any election
3868must prominently:
3869     1.  Be marked "paid political advertisement" or with the
3870abbreviation "pd. pol. adv."
3871     2.  State the name and address of the persons paying for
3872sponsoring the advertisement.
3873     3.a.(I)  State whether the advertisement and the cost of
3874production is paid for or provided in kind by or at the expense
3875of the entity publishing, displaying, broadcasting, or
3876circulating the political advertisement.; or
3877     (II)  State who provided or paid for the advertisement and
3878cost of production, if different from the source of sponsorship.
3879     b.  This subparagraph does not apply if the source of the
3880sponsorship is patently clear from the content or format of the
3881political advertisement.
3882     (d)(c)  Any political advertisement made pursuant to s.
3883106.021(3)(d) must be marked "paid political advertisement" or
3884with the abbreviation "pd. pol. adv." and must prominently state
3885the name and address of the political committee or political
3886party paying for the advertisement., "Paid for and sponsored by
3887...(name of person paying for political advertisement)....
3888Approved by ...(names of persons, party affiliation, and offices
3889sought in the political advertisement)...."
3890     (2)  Political advertisements made as in-kind contributions
3891from a political party must prominently state: "Paid political
3892advertisement paid for by in-kind by ...(name of political
3893party).... Approved by ...(name of person, party affiliation,
3894and office sought in the political advertisement)...."
3895     (3)(2)  Any political advertisement of a candidate running
3896for partisan office shall express the name of the political
3897party of which the candidate is seeking nomination or is the
3898nominee. If the candidate for partisan office is running as a
3899candidate with no party affiliation, any political advertisement
3900of the candidate must state that the candidate has no party
3901affiliation. A political advertisement of a candidate running
3902for nonpartisan office may not state the candidate's political
3903party affiliation. This section does not prohibit a political
3904advertisement from stating the candidate's partisan-related
3905experience. A candidate for nonpartisan office is prohibited
3906from campaigning based on party affiliation.
3907     (4)(3)  It is unlawful for any candidate or person on
3908behalf of a candidate to represent that any person or
3909organization supports such candidate, unless the person or
3910organization so represented has given specific approval in
3911writing to the candidate to make such representation. However,
3912this subsection does not apply to:
3913     (a)  Editorial endorsement by any newspaper, radio or
3914television station, or other recognized news medium.
3915     (b)  Publication by a party committee advocating the
3916candidacy of its nominees.
3917     (5)(4)(a)  Any political advertisement not paid for by a
3918candidate, including those paid for by a political party, other
3919than an independent expenditure, offered by or on behalf of a
3920candidate must be approved in advance by the candidate. Such
3921political advertisement must expressly state that the content of
3922the advertisement was approved by the candidate, unless the
3923political advertisement is published, displayed, or circulated
3924in compliance with subparagraph (1)(a)2., and must state who
3925paid for the advertisement. The candidate shall provide a
3926written statement of authorization to the newspaper, radio
3927station, television station, or other medium for each such
3928advertisement submitted for publication, display, broadcast, or
3929other distribution.
3930     (b)  Any person who makes an independent expenditure for a
3931political advertisement shall provide a written statement that
3932no candidate has approved the advertisement to the newspaper,
3933radio station, television station, or other medium for each such
3934advertisement submitted for publication, display, broadcast, or
3935other distribution. The advertisement must also contain a
3936statement that no candidate has approved the advertisement.
3937     (c)  This subsection does not apply to campaign messages
3938used by a candidate and his or her supporters if those messages
3939are designed to be worn by a person.
3940     (6)(5)  No political advertisement of a candidate who is
3941not an incumbent of the office for which the candidate is
3942running shall use the word "re-elect." Additionally, such
3943advertisement must include the word "for" between the
3944candidate's name and the office for which the candidate is
3945running, in order that incumbency is not implied. This
3946subsection does not apply to bumper stickers or items designed
3947to be worn by a person.
3948     (7)  Political advertisements paid for by a political party
3949or an affiliated party committee may use names and abbreviations
3950as registered under s. 103.081 in the disclaimer.
3951     (8)(6)  This section does not apply to novelty items having
3952a retail value of $10 or less which support, but do not oppose,
3953a candidate or issue.
3954     (9)(7)  Any political advertisement which is published,
3955displayed, or produced in a language other than English may
3956provide the information required by this section in the language
3957used in the advertisement.
3958     (10)(8)  This section does not apply to any campaign
3959message or political advertisement used by a candidate and the
3960candidate's supporters or by a political committee if the
3961message or advertisement is:
3962     (a)  Designed to be worn by a person.
3963     (b)  Placed as a paid link on an Internet website, provided
3964the message or advertisement is no more than 200 characters in
3965length and the link directs the user to another Internet website
3966that complies with subsection (1).
3967     (c)  Placed as a graphic or picture link where compliance
3968with the requirements of this section is not reasonably
3969practical due to the size of the graphic or picture link and the
3970link directs the user to another Internet website that complies
3971with subsection (1).
3972     (d)  Placed at no cost on an Internet website for which
3973there is no cost to post content for public users.
3974     (e)  Placed or distributed on an unpaid profile or account
3975which is available to the public without charge or on a social
3976networking Internet website, as long as the source of the
3977message or advertisement is patently clear from the content or
3978format of the message or advertisement. A candidate or political
3979committee may prominently display a statement indicating that
3980the website or account is an official website or account of the
3981candidate or political committee and is approved by the
3982candidate or political committee. A website or account may not
3983be marked as official without prior approval by the candidate or
3984political committee.
3985     (f)  Distributed as a text message or other message via
3986Short Message Service, provided the message is no more than 200
3987characters in length or requires the recipient to sign up or opt
3988in to receive it.
3989     (g)  Connected with or included in any software application
3990or accompanying function, provided that the user signs up, opts
3991in, downloads, or otherwise accesses the application from or
3992through a website that complies with subsection (1).
3993     (h)  Sent by a third-party user from or through a campaign
3994or committee's website, provided the website complies with
3995subsection (1).
3996     (i)  Contained in or distributed through any other
3997technology-related item, service, or device for which compliance
3998with subsection (1) is not reasonably practical due to the size
3999or nature of such item, service, or device as available, or the
4000means of displaying the message or advertisement makes
4001compliance with subsection (1) impracticable.
4002     (11)(9)  Any person who willfully violates any provision of
4003this section is subject to the civil penalties prescribed in s.
4004106.265.
4005     Section 67.  Section 106.1437, Florida Statutes, is amended
4006to read:
4007     106.1437  Miscellaneous advertisements.-Any advertisement,
4008other than a political advertisement, independent expenditure,
4009or electioneering communication, on billboards, bumper stickers,
4010radio, or television, or in a newspaper, a magazine, or a
4011periodical, intended to influence public policy or the vote of a
4012public official, shall clearly designate the sponsor of such
4013advertisement by including a clearly readable statement of
4014sponsorship. If the advertisement is broadcast on television,
4015the advertisement shall also contain a verbal statement of
4016sponsorship. This section does shall not apply to an editorial
4017endorsement. For purposes of this chapter, an expenditure made
4018for, or in furtherance of, a miscellaneous advertisement is not
4019considered to be a contribution to or on behalf of a candidate,
4020and does not constitute an independent expenditure. Such
4021expenditures are not subject to the limitations applicable to
4022independent expenditures.
4023     Section 68.  Section 106.17, Florida Statutes, is amended
4024to read:
4025     106.17  Polls and surveys relating to candidacies.-Any
4026candidate, political committee, committee of continuous
4027existence, electioneering communication organization, or state
4028or county executive committee of a political party may authorize
4029or conduct a political poll, survey, index, or measurement of
4030any kind relating to candidacy for public office so long as the
4031candidate, political committee, committee of continuous
4032existence, electioneering communication organization, or
4033political party maintains complete jurisdiction over the poll in
4034all its aspects. State and county executive committees of a
4035political party or an affiliated party committee may authorize
4036and conduct political polls for the purpose of determining the
4037viability of potential candidates. Such poll results may be
4038shared with potential candidates, and expenditures incurred by
4039state and county executive committees or an affiliated party
4040committee for potential candidate polls are not contributions to
4041the potential candidates.
4042     Section 69.  Subsection (4) is added to section 106.19,
4043Florida Statutes, to read:
4044     106.19  Violations by candidates, persons connected with
4045campaigns, and political committees.-
4046     (4)  Except as otherwise expressly stated, the failure by a
4047candidate to comply with the requirements of this chapter has no
4048effect upon whether the candidate has qualified for the office
4049the candidate is seeking.
4050     Section 70.  Subsections (2) and (3), paragraph (i) of
4051subsection (4), and subsection (5) of section 106.25, Florida
4052Statutes, are amended to read:
4053     106.25  Reports of alleged violations to Florida Elections
4054Commission; disposition of findings.-
4055     (2)  The commission shall investigate all violations of
4056this chapter and chapter 104, but only after having received
4057either a sworn complaint or information reported to it under
4058this subsection by the Division of Elections. Such sworn
4059complaint must be based upon personal information or information
4060other than hearsay. Any person, other than the division, having
4061information of any violation of this chapter or chapter 104
4062shall file a sworn complaint with the commission. The commission
4063shall investigate only those alleged violations specifically
4064contained within the sworn complaint. If any complainant fails
4065to allege all violations that arise from the facts or
4066allegations alleged in a complaint, the commission shall be
4067barred from investigating a subsequent complaint from such
4068complainant that is based upon such facts or allegations that
4069were raised or could have been raised in the first complaint. If
4070the complaint includes allegations of violations relating to
4071expense items reimbursed by a candidate, committee, or
4072organization to the campaign account before a sworn complaint is
4073filed, the commission shall be barred from investigating such
4074allegations. Such sworn complaint shall state whether a
4075complaint of the same violation has been made to any state
4076attorney. Within 5 days after receipt of a sworn complaint, the
4077commission shall transmit a copy of the complaint to the alleged
4078violator. The respondent shall have 14 days after receipt of the
4079complaint to file an initial response, and the executive
4080director may not determine the legal sufficiency of the
4081complaint during that time period. If the executive director
4082finds that the complaint is legally sufficient, the respondent
4083shall be notified of such finding by letter, which sets forth
4084the statutory provisions alleged to have been violated and the
4085alleged factual basis that supports the finding. All sworn
4086complaints alleging violations of the Florida Election Code over
4087which the commission has jurisdiction shall be filed with the
4088commission within 2 years after the alleged violations. The
4089period of limitations is tolled on the day a sworn complaint is
4090filed with the commission. The complainant may withdraw the
4091sworn complaint at any time prior to a probable cause hearing if
4092good cause is shown. Withdrawal shall be requested in writing,
4093signed by the complainant, and witnessed by a notary public,
4094stating the facts and circumstances constituting good cause. The
4095executive director shall prepare a written recommendation
4096regarding disposition of the request which shall be given to the
4097commission together with the request. "Good cause" shall be
4098determined based upon the legal sufficiency or insufficiency of
4099the complaint to allege a violation and the reasons given by the
4100complainant for wishing to withdraw the complaint. If withdrawal
4101is permitted, the commission must close the investigation and
4102the case. No further action may be taken. The complaint will
4103become a public record at the time of withdrawal.
4104     (3)  For the purposes of commission jurisdiction, a
4105violation shall mean the willful performance of an act
4106prohibited by this chapter or chapter 104 or the willful failure
4107to perform an act required by this chapter or chapter 104. The
4108commission may not by rule determine what constitutes
4109willfulness or further define the term "willful" for purposes of
4110this chapter or chapter 104. Willfulness is a determination of
4111fact; however, at the request of the respondent at any time
4112after probable cause is found, willfulness may be considered and
4113determined in an informal hearing before the commission.
4114     (4)  The commission shall undertake a preliminary
4115investigation to determine if the facts alleged in a sworn
4116complaint or a matter initiated by the division constitute
4117probable cause to believe that a violation has occurred.
4118     (i)1.  Upon a commission finding of probable cause, the
4119counsel for the commission shall attempt to reach a consent
4120agreement with the respondent. At any time, the commission may
4121enter into a consent order with a respondent without requiring
4122the respondent to admit to a violation of law within the
4123jurisdiction of the commission.
4124     2.  A consent agreement is not binding upon either party
4125unless and until it is signed by the respondent and by counsel
4126for the commission upon approval by the commission.
4127     3.  Nothing herein shall be construed to prevent the
4128commission from entering into a consent agreement with a
4129respondent prior to a commission finding of probable cause if a
4130respondent indicates in writing a desire to enter into
4131negotiations directed towards reaching such a consent agreement.
4132Any consent agreement reached under this subparagraph is subject
4133to the provisions of subparagraph 2. and shall have the same
4134force and effect as a consent agreement reached after the
4135commission finding of probable cause.
4136
4137In a case where probable cause is found, the commission shall
4138make a preliminary determination to consider the matter or to
4139refer the matter to the state attorney for the judicial circuit
4140in which the alleged violation occurred. Notwithstanding any
4141other provisions of this section, the commission may, at its
4142discretion, dismiss any complaint at any stage of disposition if
4143it determines that the public interest would not be served by
4144proceeding further, in which case the commission shall issue a
4145public report stating with particularity its reasons for the
4146dismissal.
4147     (5)  Unless A person alleged by the Elections Commission to
4148have committed a violation of this chapter or chapter 104 may
4149elect, as a matter of right elects, within 30 days after the
4150date of the filing of the commission's allegations, to have a
4151formal administrative or informal hearing conducted before the
4152commission, or elects to resolve the complaint by consent order,
4153such person shall be entitled to a formal administrative hearing
4154conducted by an administrative law judge in the Division of
4155Administrative Hearings. The administrative law judge in such
4156proceedings shall enter a final order, which may include the
4157imposition of civil penalties, subject to appeal as provided in
4158s. 120.68. If the person does not elect to have a hearing by an
4159administrative law judge and does not elect to resolve the
4160complaint by a consent order, the person is entitled to a formal
4161or informal hearing conducted before the commission.
4162     Section 71.  Subsection (1) of section 106.26, Florida
4163Statutes, is amended to read:
4164     106.26  Powers of commission; rights and responsibilities
4165of parties; findings by commission.-
4166     (1)  The commission shall, pursuant to rules adopted and
4167published in accordance with chapter 120, consider all sworn
4168complaints filed with it and all matters reported to it by the
4169Division of Elections. In order to carry out the
4170responsibilities prescribed by this chapter, the commission is
4171empowered to subpoena and bring before it, or its duly
4172authorized representatives, any person in the state, or any
4173person doing business in the state, or any person who has filed
4174or is required to have filed any application, document, papers,
4175or other information with an office or agency of this state or a
4176political subdivision thereof and to require the production of
4177any papers, books, or other records relevant to any
4178investigation, including the records and accounts of any bank or
4179trust company doing business in this state. Duly authorized
4180representatives of the commission are empowered to administer
4181all oaths and affirmations in the manner prescribed by law to
4182witnesses who shall appear before them concerning any relevant
4183matter. Should any witness fail to respond to the lawful
4184subpoena of the commission or, having responded, fail to answer
4185all lawful inquiries or to turn over evidence that has been
4186subpoenaed, the commission may file a complaint in the before
4187any circuit court where the witness resides of the state setting
4188up such failure on the part of the witness. On the filing of
4189such complaint, the court shall take jurisdiction of the witness
4190and the subject matter of said complaint and shall direct the
4191witness to respond to all lawful questions and to produce all
4192documentary evidence in the witness's possession which is
4193lawfully demanded. The failure of any witness to comply with
4194such order of the court shall constitute a direct and criminal
4195contempt of court, and the court shall punish said witness
4196accordingly. However, the refusal by a witness to answer
4197inquiries or turn over evidence on the basis that such testimony
4198or material will tend to incriminate such witness shall not be
4199deemed refusal to comply with the provisions of this chapter.
4200The sheriffs in the several counties shall make such service and
4201execute all process or orders when required by the commission.
4202Sheriffs shall be paid for these services by the commission as
4203provided for in s. 30.231. Any person who is served with a
4204subpoena to attend a hearing of the commission also shall be
4205served with a general statement informing him or her of the
4206subject matter of the commission's investigation or inquiry and
4207a notice that he or she may be accompanied at the hearing by
4208counsel of his or her own choosing.
4209     Section 72.  Subsections (1) through (4) of section
4210106.265, Florida Statutes, are amended and renumbered, and
4211present subsection (5) of that section is renumbered as
4212subsection (6), to read:
4213     106.265  Civil penalties.-
4214     (1)  The commission or, in cases referred to the Division
4215of Administrative Hearings pursuant to s. 106.25(5), the
4216administrative law judge is authorized upon the finding of a
4217violation of this chapter or chapter 104 to impose civil
4218penalties in the form of fines not to exceed $1,000 per count,
4219or, if applicable, to impose a civil penalty as provided in s.
4220104.271 or s. 106.19.
4221     (2)  In determining the amount of such civil penalties, the
4222commission or administrative law judge shall consider, among
4223other mitigating and aggravating circumstances:
4224     (a)  The gravity of the act or omission;
4225     (b)  Any previous history of similar acts or omissions;
4226     (c)  The appropriateness of such penalty to the financial
4227resources of the person, political committee, committee of
4228continuous existence, electioneering communications
4229organization, or political party; and
4230     (d)  Whether the person, political committee, committee of
4231continuous existence, electioneering communications
4232organization, or political party has shown good faith in
4233attempting to comply with the provisions of this chapter or
4234chapter 104.
4235     (3)(2)  If any person, political committee, committee of
4236continuous existence, electioneering communications
4237organization, or political party fails or refuses to pay to the
4238commission any civil penalties assessed pursuant to the
4239provisions of this section, the commission shall be responsible
4240for collecting the civil penalties resulting from such action.
4241     (4)(3)  Any civil penalty collected pursuant to the
4242provisions of this section shall be deposited into the General
4243Revenue Fund Election Campaign Financing Trust Fund.
4244     (5)(4)  Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
4245chapter, Any fine assessed pursuant to the provisions of this
4246chapter shall, which fine is designated to be deposited or which
4247would otherwise be deposited into the General Revenue Fund of
4248the state, shall be deposited into the Election Campaign
4249Financing Trust Fund.
4250     Section 73.  Subsection (1) and paragraph (b) of subsection
4251(3) of section 106.29, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
4252     106.29  Reports by political parties; restrictions on
4253contributions and expenditures; penalties.-
4254     (1)  The state executive committee and each county
4255executive committee of each political party regulated by chapter
4256103 shall file regular reports of all contributions received and
4257all expenditures made by such committee. However, the reports
4258shall not include contributions and expenditures that are
4259reported to the Federal Election Commission. In addition, when a
4260special election is called to fill a vacancy in office, each
4261state executive committee, each affiliated party committee, and
4262each county executive committee making contributions or
4263expenditures to influence the results of the special election or
4264the preceding special primary election must file campaign
4265treasurers' reports on the dates set by the Department of State
4266pursuant to s. 100.111. Such reports shall contain the same
4267information as do reports required of candidates by s. 106.07
4268and shall be filed on the 10th day following the end of each
4269calendar quarter, except that, during the period from the last
4270day for candidate qualifying until the general election, such
4271reports shall be filed on the Friday immediately preceding each
4272special primary election, special election, both the primary
4273election, and the general election. In addition to the reports
4274filed under this section, the state executive committee and each
4275county executive committee shall file a copy of each prior
4276written acceptance of an in-kind contribution given by the
4277committee during the preceding calendar quarter as required
4278under s. 106.08(6). Each state executive committee shall file
4279the original and one copy of its reports with the Division of
4280Elections. Each county executive committee shall file its
4281reports with the supervisor of elections in the county in which
4282such committee exists. Any state or county executive committee
4283failing to file a report on the designated due date shall be
4284subject to a fine as provided in subsection (3). No separate
4285fine shall be assessed for failure to file a copy of any report
4286required by this section.
4287     (3)
4288     (b)  Upon determining that a report is late, the filing
4289officer shall immediately notify the chair of the executive
4290committee as to the failure to file a report by the designated
4291due date and that a fine is being assessed for each late day.
4292The fine shall be $1,000 for a state executive committee, and
4293$50 for a county executive committee, per day for each late day,
4294not to exceed 25 percent of the total receipts or expenditures,
4295whichever is greater, for the period covered by the late report.
4296However, if an executive committee fails to file a report on the
4297Friday immediately preceding the special election or general
4298election, the fine shall be $10,000 per day for each day a state
4299executive committee is late and $500 per day for each day a
4300county executive committee is late. Upon receipt of the report,
4301the filing officer shall determine the amount of the fine which
4302is due and shall notify the chair. Notice is deemed complete
4303upon proof of delivery of written notice to the mailing or
4304street address on record with the filing officer. The filing
4305officer shall determine the amount of the fine due based upon
4306the earliest of the following:
4307     1.  When the report is actually received by such officer.
4308     2.  When the report is postmarked.
4309     3.  When the certificate of mailing is dated.
4310     4.  When the receipt from an established courier company is
4311dated.
4312     5.  When the electronic receipt issued pursuant to s.
4313106.0705 is dated.
4314
4315Such fine shall be paid to the filing officer within 20 days
4316after receipt of the notice of payment due, unless appeal is
4317made to the Florida Elections Commission pursuant to paragraph
4318(c). An officer or member of an executive committee shall not be
4319personally liable for such fine.
4320     Section 74.  Subsection (5) of section 106.35, Florida
4321Statutes, is amended to read:
4322     106.35  Distribution of funds.-
4323     (5)  The division shall adopt rules providing for the
4324weekly reports and certification and distribution of funds
4325pursuant thereto required by this section. Such rules shall, at
4326a minimum, provide for:
4327     (a)  Specifications for printed campaign treasurer's
4328reports outlining the format for such reports, including size of
4329paper, typeface, color of print, and placement of required
4330information on the form.
4331     (b)1.  specifications for electronically transmitted
4332campaign treasurer's reports outlining communication parameters
4333and protocol, data record formats, and provisions for ensuring
4334security of data and transmission.
4335     2.  All electronically transmitted campaign treasurer's
4336reports must also be filed in printed format. Printed format
4337shall not include campaign treasurer's reports submitted by
4338electronic facsimile transmission.
4339     Section 75.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (12) of section
4340112.312, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
4341     112.312  Definitions.-As used in this part and for purposes
4342of the provisions of s. 8, Art. II of the State Constitution,
4343unless the context otherwise requires:
4344     (12)
4345     (b)  "Gift" does not include:
4346     1.  Salary, benefits, services, fees, commissions, gifts,
4347or expenses associated primarily with the donee's employment,
4348business, or service as an officer or director of a corporation
4349or organization.
4350     2.  Contributions or expenditures reported pursuant to
4351chapter 106, contributions or expenditures reported pursuant to
4352federal election law, campaign-related personal services
4353provided without compensation by individuals volunteering their
4354time, or any other contribution or expenditure by a political
4355party.
4356     3.  An honorarium or an expense related to an honorarium
4357event paid to a person or the person's spouse.
4358     4.  An award, plaque, certificate, or similar personalized
4359item given in recognition of the donee's public, civic,
4360charitable, or professional service.
4361     5.  An honorary membership in a service or fraternal
4362organization presented merely as a courtesy by such
4363organization.
4364     6.  The use of a public facility or public property, made
4365available by a governmental agency, for a public purpose.
4366     7.  Transportation provided to a public officer or employee
4367by an agency in relation to officially approved governmental
4368business.
4369     8.  Gifts provided directly or indirectly by a state,
4370regional, or national organization which promotes the exchange
4371of ideas between, or the professional development of,
4372governmental officials or employees, and whose membership is
4373primarily composed of elected or appointed public officials or
4374staff, to members of that organization or officials or staff of
4375a governmental agency that is a member of that organization.
4376     Section 76.  Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
4377112.3215, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
4378     112.3215  Lobbying before the executive branch or the
4379Constitution Revision Commission; registration and reporting;
4380investigation by commission.-
4381     (1)  For the purposes of this section:
4382     (d)  "Expenditure" means a payment, distribution, loan,
4383advance, reimbursement, deposit, or anything of value made by a
4384lobbyist or principal for the purpose of lobbying. The term
4385"expenditure" does not include contributions or expenditures
4386reported pursuant to chapter 106 or contributions or
4387expenditures reported pursuant to federal election law,
4388campaign-related personal services provided without compensation
4389by individuals volunteering their time, any other contribution
4390or expenditure made by or to a political party, or any other
4391contribution or expenditure made by an organization that is
4392exempt from taxation under 26 U.S.C. s. 527 or s. 501(c)(4).
4393     Section 77.  Subsection (1) of section 876.05, Florida
4394Statutes, is amended to read:
4395     876.05  Public employees; oath.-
4396     (1)  All persons who now or hereafter are employed by or
4397who now or hereafter are on the payroll of the state, or any of
4398its departments and agencies, subdivisions, counties, cities,
4399school boards and districts of the free public school system of
4400the state or counties, or institutions of higher learning, and
4401all candidates for public office, except candidates for federal
4402office, are required to take an oath before any person duly
4403authorized to take acknowledgments of instruments for public
4404record in the state in the following form:
4405
4406     I, ...., a citizen of the State of Florida and of the
4407United States of America, and being employed by or an officer of
4408.... and a recipient of public funds as such employee or
4409officer, do hereby solemnly swear or affirm that I will support
4410the Constitution of the United States and of the State of
4411Florida.
4412     Section 78.  Section 876.07, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
4413     Section 79.  If any provision of this act or its
4414application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the
4415invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of
4416the act which can be given effect without the invalid provision
4417or application, and to this end the provisions of this act are
4418severable.
4419     Section 80.  Except as otherwise expressly provided in this
4420act, this act shall take effect upon becoming a law.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.