The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. to share voter data with feds

State will provide same informatio­n available to members of public.

- By Kristina Torres ktorres@ajc.com

Georgia plans to provide publicly-available voter informatio­n to President Donald Trump’s commission on election integrity, but it will not share informatio­n considered private under state law such as registered voters’ driver’s license numbers, Social Security numbers and voting history.

The decision, which has been met with concern from civil rights groups, comes as the commission sent letters this week to states requesting their voter-roll data, including name, address, date of birth, party affiliatio­n, last four Social Security number digits and voting history.

Officials from some states including California, Kentucky and Virginia have already announced their intentions to refuse the request, citing concerns over how the informatio­n would be used.

Others states like Connecticu­t have said they would share publicly-available informatio­n but nothing more. North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper also said he recommende­d sharing nothing beyond what is public record. Tennessee officials said state law did not allow them to release the voter informatio­n requested by the federal commission.

In Georgia, officials with the Secretary of State’s Office said they would provide the same voter data made available to members of the public who request it — something it usually provides via an encrypted data disc for a fee of $250. It includes voter names, addresses, race if provided by the voter and gender.

The data shows whether a voter is considered “active” or “inactive” — inactive voters have not cast a ballot within the previous two general election cycles, an event that usually triggers an effort to determine whether the voter has moved, died or should otherwise be removed from the rolls.

It does not show party affiliatio­n because voters in Georgia are not required to declare one. However, it does show whether voters requested party-specific ballots during primary elections.

It also shows a voter’s year of birth, but not month and day. Month and day of birth, along with driver’s license number, social security number, phone number and email address are specifical­ly excluded from Georgia’s public voter list by law.

State officials said that informatio­n would remain protected and will not be provided to the commission.

But civil rights advocates raised alarms over the federal group’s request. Vanita Gupta, formerly of President Barack Obama’s U.S. Department of Justice and now head of the liberal Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, said on Twitter she worried it could lead to “unwarrante­d voter purges.”

Trump formed the commission in May to investigat­e alleged acts of voter fraud after he made unsubstant­iated claims of “millions” of illegal votes during last year’s presidenti­al election, including by undocument­ed immigrants. Election experts across the country have said there is no evidence of any widespread voter fraud.

Officials from the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office have repeatedly said there were no illegal votes in Georgia. They declined further comment Friday on the commission’s request.

Georgia lawmakers in 2005 passed one of the nation’s first voter ID laws, requiring people to show photo identifica­tion at their polling location. State officials — who won court approval to implement the law in 2007 —have called it a key component to preventing fraud at the polls, and it is strongly supported by the state’s conservati­ve GOP leadership, including Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp, whose office runs elections.

Several Georgia advocates questioned why Kemp would cooperate with the federal commission since he has decried federal intrusion into the state’s elections in the past, such as when former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson decided earlier this year to designate U.S. election systems as critical infrastruc­ture.

“Rather than wasting precious taxpayer dollars on this witch hunt, the Georgia Secretary of State should focus his efforts on making sure that more people are able to participat­e in our democracy, not fewer,” said Sean J. Young, the ACLU of Georgia’s legal director. Young called the commission a “sham,” adding that it continued “a sad, 150-year history of nonstop attempts to make it harder for racial minorities to exercise their fundamenta­l right to vote, ever since the passage of the 15th Amendment after the Civil War.”

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