If Florida ever allows the open carrying of firearms in the state, Broward Supervisor of Elections Joe Scott wants to make sure guns won’t be allowed in or near polling places. Legalization to allow open carry appears unlikely in Florida to become law in the foreseeable future. Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, said in November he sides with law enforcement, which opposes allowing people to openly carry firearms in the state. “I stand with them today in opposition,” he said. But Scott told Broward’s senators and representatives that he wants to make sure that if open carry legislation becomes a possibility, it would include a polling place exception. Scott said he was “not coming from a position of being somebody who’s anti-gun.” He said and his wife are both gun owners “and did very well in marksmanship when we were in the Army.” But, he told the Broward Legislative Delegation, people openly carrying guns around polling places would be a terrible idea. “We’ve seen in other parts of the country where you have open carry laws that people will do things like dress in fatigues and carry an AR-15 outside of polling places and election offices,” he said. If open carry ever advances in the state, Scott said, it should include “some sort of provision that makes it clear that you cannot use your right to open carry to intimidate voters.” He said it would need to be wider than the current 150-foot zone outside polling places, inside of which people are prohibited from campaigning.