The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. stays in voter accuracy group as some states opt out

Secretary of state says ERIC helps state cancel invalid registrati­ons.

- By Mark Niesse

Georgia is staying in a multistate organizati­on that helps keep voter registrati­on lists accurate, even as other Republican-led states pull out amid misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories.

Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger reaffirmed his commitment to the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center, a 28-state collaborat­ion that shares informatio­n about voters after they move or die. Then their registrati­ons can later be canceled in the state they moved from.

“Being a member of ERIC has allowed us to be recognized as having the cleanest voter rolls in the country,” Raffensper­ger said last week. “For example, if someone moves from here to North Carolina, they’ll let us know that they registered, and then we can begin to objectivel­y take them off the voter rolls.”

Several states recently announced they’re quitting ERIC, including Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Missouri and West Virginia.

Election conspiracy theorists and Republican officials in those states have accused ERIC, a bipartisan organizati­on overseen by its member states, of working with liberal groups and encouragin­g fraud, allegation­s that ERIC denies. ERIC has also faced criticism for mailing letters to newly eligible voters so they can register to vote.

But Raffensper­ger said ERIC is a valuable tool to fight fraud and cancel outdated registrati­ons.

Georgia joined ERIC under a law passed by the General Assembly in 2019, and the state’s elections overhaul law approved two years ago required the secretary of state’s office to use informatio­n from ERIC to help maintain voter lists.

About 120,000 people have canceled their Georgia registrati­ons after they moved and received notificati­on letters through ERIC, according to the secretary of state’s office. Hundreds of thousands more voters who appear to have moved have been declared “inactive,” a designatio­n that allows their registrati­ons to be canceled after they decline to participat­e in the next two general elections.

Sate election officials have canceled 922,000 outdated voter registrati­ons since 2017, and there are now 7.9 million registered voters in Georgia.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN. TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? “Being a member of ERIC has allowed us to be recognized as having the cleanest voter rolls in the country,” Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN. TEMKAR@AJC.COM “Being a member of ERIC has allowed us to be recognized as having the cleanest voter rolls in the country,” Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said.

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