Sen. LaVon Bracy Davis and Rep. RaShon Young have filed voting rights legislation that would automatically register all eligible Floridians to vote and allow voter registration on Election Day.
“For too long in Florida, we have watched politicians rig the rules, silence communities, and manipulate our elections to cling to power. The Florida Voting Rights Act is our answer to that: bold, clear, and rooted in justice,” said Bracy Davis, an Ocoee Democrat.
“This bill is about protecting Black voters, working families, young people, language minorities, and returning citizens who have been deliberately targeted and shut out of the democratic process.”
The Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore Florida Voting Rights Act proposes several sweeping changes, including making vote-by-mail requests permanent and keeping a public database so offenders can keep track of requirements to restore their voting rights. It would also make Election Day a paid holiday.
The legislation (SB 1598, HB 1419) would also eliminate the state’s controversial Office of Election Crimes and Security. The Office gained attention in 2024 when state police knocked on residents’ homes to question them about signing petitions to get an abortion rights amendment on the ballot.
The legislation has been filed for three years in a row. The bill’s original sponsor was Sen. Geraldine Thompson, who passed away in 2025 after surgery complications. The act was named after the Moores, a Black couple who were civil rights activists and were murdered by the Ku Klux Klan in 1951.
“This legislation is about common-sense voting policy and ensuring every eligible Floridian, regardless of race, zip code, language, or background, has meaningful access to the ballot box,” said Young, an Orlando Democrat.
“Democracy is strongest when participation is fair, secure, and accessible to all. Naming this legislation after Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore honors their courage and sacrifice in the fight for voting rights, and it also honors the legacy of Sen. Geraldine Thompson, who devoted her life to preserving Black history in Florida and reminding us that progress must be protected.
The legislation faces an uphill battle to pass in a Republican-controlled Legislature, but Democrats have continued to push the issue.
“Voting rights are a fundamental human right, the foundation of a healthy democracy,” said Jonathan Webber, Florida policy director at the Southern Poverty Law Center. “By sponsoring this landmark state voting rights act, Sen. LaVon Bracy Davis and newly-elected Rep. RaShon Young are carrying forward the fight to safeguard access and ensure all eligible voters can participate.”