Chicago Sun-Times

White apologizes for voter registrati­on mistakes, gov undeterred in push to make Illinois first primary

- BY NEAL EARLEY, STAFF REPORTER nearly@suntimes.com | @neal_earley

SPRINGFIEL­D — Just hours after Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White apologized for a string of electoral snafus that included allowing at least one non-citizen to vote, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Wednesday the gaffes should not stop the state from taking the lead in future presidenti­al nominating contests.

“Well, we’ve been running elections for an awful long time,” Pritzker told reporters.

Pritzker was questioned about his push to make Illinois the new first-in-the-nation state in light of the state’s own voter registrati­on troubles at an unrelated news conference.

White made his apology at an earlier House hearing to get to the bottom of the problems in the state’s voter registrati­on program — which included mistakenly registerin­g hundreds of self-identified noncitizen­s, allowing 16-year-olds to begin the registrati­on process and mistakenly striking former prison inmates from the voter rolls.

“I want to apologize to you and all of those who were impacted,” White told state lawmakers. “There was no effort put forth to hide anything or to cook the books so to speak.”

Pritzker was questioned about the problems two days after he first suggested that Illinois, not its northweste­rn neighbor, should be the first state to vote in the presidenti­al nominating process. Delayed results in the Iowa Democratic caucuses have angered many Democrats and re-ignited questions about which state should be first to vote in the presidenti­al nominating process.

“I want to be clear with everybody, this state is a diverse state in so many ways, in ways that Iowa and New Hampshire are not,” Pritzker told reporters.

But even as Pritzker pushed for Illinois to move to the front of the line for the presidenti­al nominating process, the state was still trying to figure out how self-identified noncitizen­s were mistakenly registered to vote.

Election officials had said 545 people, checked “no” on the driver’s license applicatio­n citizenshi­p question, but they were registered to vote anyway before the errors were caught. And 16 of those self-identified non-citizens went on to actually cast ballots in elections.

At a state House committee hearing Wednesday morning, officials with White’s office said a glitch in the Automatic Voter Registrati­on program was the cause of the improper registrati­ons.

Election officials confirmed during the hearing that one non-citizen voted in Downstate Champaign County in the 2018 general election. But they believe nine of the 16 selfidenti­fied non-citizens found to have cast ballots are actually U.S. citizens because they appear to have been legitimate­ly registered to vote before the snafu, said Matt Dietrich, a spokesman for the state electoral board.

“That means they already had signed a legal document attesting to their citizenshi­p when they registered previously, which is the legal requiremen­t for voting,” Dietrich told the Sun-Times later in an email. “That attestatio­n stands despite their checking of the noncitizen box.”

The citizenshi­p status of the other six who went on to vote despite checking the noncitizen box was still in doubt, Dietrich said.

White, who sat quietly as officials from his office answered most of the questions from the lawmakers, apologized, saying “the entire staff has been put on notice.”

“I think if this were to happen again, first I’d be fired, then we should notify the Legislatur­e and the governor’s office,” said Nathan Maddox, senior legal advisor to the Illinois Secretary of State.

The Automatic Voter Registrati­on program, which passed the General Assembly unanimousl­y in 2017, allows motorists who apply for or renew their driver’s licenses to be automatica­lly registered to vote.

However, at the time, some Republican lawmakers had reservatio­ns about the program given the potential for bugs.

State Rep. Keith R. Wheeler, R-Oswego, said White’s office should have done a better job doing a “stress test” before they rolled the program out.

“This is a situation that should have been anticipate­d,” Wheeler said.

 ??  ?? Jesse White
Jesse White
 ??  ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker
Gov. J.B. Pritzker

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