Los Angeles Times

GOP states exiting voter fraud group amid strife

- By Christina A. Cassidy and Julie Carr Smyth Cassidy and Smyth write for the Associated Press.

— Election officials from states enrolled in a bipartisan effort to ensure accurate voter lists decided Friday against making rule changes that had been pushed by Republican­s amid conspiracy theories targeting the group, prompting more GOP-leaning states to leave.

The Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center, known as ERIC, has a record of combating voter fraud by identifyin­g those who have died or moved between states. Yet it also has drawn suspicion among some Republican state leaders after a series of online stories surfaced last year questionin­g the center’s funding and purpose.

Earlier this month, Republican election officials from Florida, Missouri and West Virginia said they planned to withdraw from the group, joining Louisiana and Alabama. Former President Trump, on social media, has called on every Republican-led state to leave, characteri­zing it, without evidence, as a “terrible voter registrati­on system that ‘pumps the rolls’ for Democrats and does nothing to clean them up.”

On Friday, representa­tives from the group’s member states met remotely for about three hours to discuss the changes promoted by Republican­s, which included dropping a requiremen­t for members to mail notices to people who are eligible but not registered to vote. Currently, ERIC is made up of 32 states and the District of Columbia, but that number will drop once Alabama, Florida, Missouri and West Virginia formally depart later this year.

After Friday’s meeting, Republican secretarie­s of state in Iowa and Ohio became the latest to say they would pull out.

“The action Ohio is taking today follows nearly a year of good faith, bipartisan efforts to reform ERIC’s oversight and services,” Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, who is considerin­g a run for U.S. Senate, wrote in a letter. “Unfortunat­ely, these attempts to save what could be an unparallel­ed election integrity service have fallen short.”

Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate said he would recommend to the governor and Legislatur­e that the state end its membership in ERIC because of the organizati­on’s decision not to amend the membership agreement. He also said the departure of several other states makes the network less valuable.

ERIC’s executive director, Shane Hamlin, said in an emailed statement that “serious considerat­ion” was given to the proposals but the members voted to maintain the program’s current requiremen­ts.

“We hope all states will choose to be members of ERIC, as it is the most effective tool available to help ensure voter rolls are as accurate as possible and to detect possible cases of illegal voting,” Hamlin said.

West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner, a Republican, will push ahead with the state’s plans to leave the system, spokespers­on Mike Queen said after Friday’s meeting.

The departures have frustrated some state elec tion officials.

“It’s notable that the states at the forefront of these attacks, who have a newfound desire to opt out of sending eligible citizens informatio­n on how to register to vote, are led by Republican politician­s who are actively trying to curry favor from their party’s extremists and, in most cases, Trump himself, to further their own future aspiration­s for higher office,” Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, said in a statement.

The states’ departures threaten to undermine a voluntary effort that has stood for more than a decade as the only national system that helps states identify voters who are not eligible to cast a ballot.

The system works by states sharing certain data through secure channels, allowing election officials to identify and remove people from voter rolls who have died or moved to other states. ERIC also helps states identify and ultimately prosecute people who vote in multiple states.

The system has been credited in Maryland with identifyin­g some 66,000 potentiall­y deceased voters and 778,000 people who may have moved out of state since 2013. In Georgia, officials said nearly 100,000 voters no longer eligible to vote in the state had been removed based on data provided by ERIC.

One conspiracy theory targeting the system claims that it was funded by billionair­e philanthro­pist George Soros, a frequent GOP target. While the voter datasharin­g system did receive initial funding from the nonpartisa­n Pew Charitable Trusts, that money was separate from funding provided to Pew by a Soros-affiliated group that went to an unrelated effort, Hamlin said. The system has since been funded through annual dues by member states.

It appeared likely that other GOP-led states could leave. Alaska “will continue to review its membership in ERIC and we do not intend to make any immediate decisions,” Division of Elections spokespers­on Tiffany Montemayor said in an email to the Associated Press.

In Texas, state election officials announced plans last week to conduct their own “interstate voter registrati­on crosscheck program,” although it’s unclear how they intend to do that and how effective such an effort would be, especially if it involves only a few states. Meanwhile, legislatio­n has been introduced that would compel Texas to withdraw from ERIC.

Florida and Texas, with their combined 30.5 million active registered voters, would pose a considerab­le loss to the data-sharing effort.

With no national voter registrati­on clearingho­use, ERIC is the only data-sharing program among the states. It was started in 2012 by seven states and was bipartisan from the beginning, with four of the founding states led at the time by Republican­s.

In California, Kansas and New Hampshire, lawmakers have introduced bills that would enable their states to join it, according to the Voting Rights Lab, which tracks voting legislatio­n. New York is another high-population state that does not belong to the system.

One change sought by Republican­s was removing what they characteri­ze as partisan influences within ERIC. They had targeted David Becker, a former U.S. Justice Department lawyer who served in both the Clinton and George W. Bush administra­tions. Becker, who was involved in developing the ERIC system at Pew, has held one of two nonvoting seats on the board. The other has been vacant.

A group of Republican­s, including Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger and former Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson, defended Becker in a public letter, decrying attacks on him as disinforma­tion.

Becker, who now leads the Center for Election Innovation and Research, said this week that he has informed ERIC that he will not accept renominati­on to the board. Hamlin said ERIC member states decided Friday to eliminate both nonvoting seats on the board.

‘We hope all states will choose to be members ... as it is the most effective tool available to help ensure voter rolls are as accurate as possible.’

— Shane Hamlin, executive director of ERIC

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