The Niagara Falls Review

Trump’s voter panel responds to privacy group’s lawsuit

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HOLLY RAMER

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CONCORD, N.H. — U.S. President Donald Trump’s commission on election fraud continues to defend its request for detailed voter informatio­n in court ahead of its first meeting later this week.

The commission had asked states to provide publicly available data including names, birthdates and partial Social Security numbers, but last week it told states to hold off until a judge rules on a lawsuit filed by the Electronic Privacy Informatio­n Center in Washington.

The group, which argued the commission should have completed an assessment of privacy concerns before making the request, last week updated its complaint to add the director of White House Informatio­n technology to its suit after the commission said a repurposed computer system in that office would store the data. In a response filed Monday, the commission argued neither the commission nor the office that will store the data is an agency required to complete the privacy assessment.

It also repeated its arguments that there is nothing wrong with one government entity sharing public informatio­n with another and that the privacy group has not made a case that any of its members would be harmed.

“By collecting voter data from the states, the commission seeks to enhance the American people’s confidence in the integrity of the voting processes used in federal elections,’” the commission wrote, quoting from the executive order that created the panel.

Trump, a Republican, created the commission in May to investigat­e his allegation­s — offered without evidence — that millions of people voted illegally in 2016. Democrats blasted the commission as a biased panel bent on voter suppressio­n, and 17 states and the District of Columbia are refusing The Associated Press

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