Florida Supreme Court declines to speed up redistricting case
Orlando Sentinel - Gift Link
TALLAHASSEE The Florida Supreme Court on Monday refused to speed up a challenge to a congressional redistricting plan that Gov. Ron DeSantis pushed through the Legislature in 2022, likely meaning the disputed map will remain in effect for this years elections.
The court issued a one-sentence order that did not explain its reasons for denying a request from voting-rights groups and other plaintiffs to shorten timeframes and hold arguments during the first week of April.
But with a qualifying period scheduled April 22 to April 26 for congressional candidates, lawyers for the plaintiffs acknowledged in a Feb. 1 motion that the disputed map likely would remain in effect for this years elections unless the Supreme Court expedited the case. In addition to seeking early-April arguments, the motion included requesting a shorter schedule for filing briefs.
Without an expedited briefing schedule, petitioners and Floridians will again vote under a redistricting plan of questionable legality, the motion said, referring to the disputed map also being used in the 2022 elections.
The Supreme Court order came after attorneys for Secretary of State Cord Byrd and the Legislature filed a document Friday objecting to speeding up the case. The states attorneys wrote that a 1st District Court of Appeal ruling, which upheld the redistricting plan, has offered certainty for elections officials as they prepare for the 2024 elections.