The Columbus Dispatch

Trump axes panel looking into fraud

- By John Wagner

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced that he is disbanding a controvers­ial voter fraud commission launched last year in the wake of his baseless claim that he lost the popular vote to Democrat Hillary Clinton because of millions of illegally cast ballots.

The commission met only twice amid a series of lawsuits seeking to curb its authority and claims by Democrats that it was stacked to recommend voting restrictio­ns favorable to the president’s party, possibly by stripping minority voters and poor people from the voter rolls.

In a statement, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said there is “substantia­l evidence of voter fraud” and blamed the ending of the commission on the refusal of many states to provide voter data sought by the commission and the cost of ongoing federal lawsuits.

“Rather than engage in endless legal battles at taxpayer expense,” Sanders said, Trump has signed an order to dissolve the commission.

The bipartisan panel, known as the Presidenti­al Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, had been nominally chaired by Vice President Mike Pence and led by Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, a Republican who has aggressive­ly sought to prosecute voter fraud in his state.

In the statement, Sanders said Trump had signed an executive order asking the Department of Homeland Security to review voter-fraud issues and “determine next courses of action.”

The 11-member commission proved a magnet for controvers­y from the outset and was sued by one of its own members, Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap, who alleged that he had been kept in the dark about its operations, rendering his participat­ion “essentiall­y meaningles­s.” A federal judge last month ruled partly in his favor.

Past studies have found voter fraud to be exceptiona­lly rare.

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