Chicago Sun-Times

DON’TGIVE PRIVATE INFORMATIO­NON ILLINOIS VOTERS TO TRUMPCOMMI­SSION

- Follow the Editorial Board on Twitter: @ csteditori­als. Send letters to letters@ suntimes. com.

Though just two months old, Donald Trump’s Presidenti­al Advisory Commission on Election Integrity has abandoned the “integrity” part.

Last week, the commission sent letters to 50 states and the District of Columbia asking for names of voters, their dates of birth, their voting histories, their party affiliatio­ns and partial Social Security numbers. The letters sent off alarms across the country— as they should have. By all appearance­s, the commission just wants to dig through all that closely held private data to support spurious claims of voter fraud. The commission should withdraw its request.

The White House says the commission’s goals are lofty. But all signs indicate it really is just looking for any scrap of informatio­n that might support Trump’s unfounded claim that millions of people illegally cast ballots in 2016, which would further efforts to suppress the vote in future elections. On Saturday, Trump undercut any claim the commission is open- minded by tweeting it is a “voter fraud panel.”

The commission is run by Vice President Mike Pence, which hardly puts it above politics. Two of its members— Vice Chairman Kris Kobach and Hans A. von Spakovsky— support voter- suppressio­n tactics. Last month, a federal magistrate fined Kobach $ 1,000 for misleading the court about voter registrati­on documents he took into a November meeting with Trump, which does not inspire confidence in him.

The commission is entitled to buy public informatio­n about voting records from the states. But some of the data it seeks, such as partial Social Security numbers, would be illegal for states to hand over. Many states have said they will not cooperate. Gov. Bruce Rauner should add Illinois to that list.

Previous probes have found that voter fraud at the polls is rare, but vote suppressio­n is on the rise. If this pseudo investigat­ion is used to further suppress votes, it would itself undermine the fairness of elections.

 ?? BRANDON/ AP FILE | ALEX ?? Vice President Mike Pence
BRANDON/ AP FILE | ALEX Vice President Mike Pence

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