...
"The Obama campaign also says it has registered about 100,000 new 
voters this year, part of 250,000 new registrants in the state 
overall, and the majority of them are Democrats.

Now comes the bigger task: making sure inexperienced voters can 
navigate two new state laws. The first is the so-called "No match, no 
vote" law, which requires a match between a voter's driver's license 
or Social Security number and a government database. Critics say 
database records are riddled with errors.

A second law allows citizens to challenge the legitimacy of fellow 
voters. Challengers need not prove their accusations. Instead, the 
challenged voter has two days to justify his right to cast a ballot.

State Republican lawmakers who pushed the law say it will help combat 
fraud. Democrats call it a vote-suppression measure. "Now why would 
the legislature make it easier to challenge, instead of, say spending 
more money on voter education?" said Chuck Lichtman, a Fort 
Lauderdale attorney. He heads a Democratic effort to put volunteer 
lawyers in every Florida precinct. Mr. Lichtman says 5,000 lawyers 
have signed up for the task, up from 3,500 in 2004.

Other battleground states have recently tightened voter-
identification laws, but Florida was named "the most hostile state in 
the nation to new voters" by three national voting-rights groups.

At a recent training seminar in Tampa for about 300 Obama campaign 
staffers, an election lawyer went over election-law changes that 
could lead to mass voter challenges. The staff monitors elections 
across the state. "We're going to be very aggressive this time," said 
Mr. Schale, who worked in the 2000 recount. "While I'm sitting in 
some office in Tampa, the staff will be my eyes and ears."

Republicans aren't giving details about their preparations. "If 
there's something that looks suspicious, we want it investigated by 
the appropriate authorities," said Mr. Jacobs.

Other potential problems loom, including equipment snafus. In a 2006 
congressional election in Sarasota County, machines failed to log 
some 3,000 votes. As a result, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist ordered all 
67 Florida counties to use optical scanning machines, which read hand-
marked ballots and provide a complete audit record.

But a recent Palm Beach County election showed that better machines 
don't solve all problems.

For the last month, county residents have been awaiting the result of 
the Aug. 26 election for a circuit judgeship. William Abramson 
appeared to have toppled longtime incumbent Richard Wennet by a 
margin of 17 votes out of 100,000 cast. But in a subsequent recount, 
Mr. Wennet won by 60 votes, and elections officials reported that 
3,500 ballots had gone missing.

Mr. Abramson has filed a lawsuit. Further counts offered varying 
results, including 190 ballots that were overlooked on election 
night. A state judge ordered county officials to try again Friday. If 
the numbers don't balance, he said, he would order a new 
election. "It seems like Groundhog Day," said Glenn Burhans Jr., a 
lawyer for Mr. Wennet. "Let's hope this doesn't happen in November 
because things could get really ugly."

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