The Columbus Dispatch

Trump’s attempts to show voter fraud appear to have stalled

- By Christina A. Cassidy

ATLANTA — President Donald Trump hasn’t backed away from his unsubstant­iated claim that millions of illegally cast ballots cost him the popular vote in 2016, but his efforts to investigat­e it appear to have stalled.

He transferre­d the work of the commission investigat­ing his claim to the Department of Homeland Security. This week, the department’s top official made it clear that, when it comes to elections, her focus is on safeguardi­ng state and local voting systems from cyberattac­ks and other manipulati­on.

While the U.S. Department of Justice has broad authority to investigat­e voter fraud claims, White House officials said previously that Homeland Security was the best agency to take over the work of the now-disbanded Presidenti­al Advisory Commission on Election Integrity. A Justice Department official declined comment this week on whether the agency was conducting any reviews related to voter fraud, but confirmed that no voter data collected by the commission, nor analysis of the data, was given to the agency before the commission was disbanded.

The end of the commission is welcome news to voting rights advocates concerned that its ultimate goal was to promote voter-suppressio­n efforts. They and numerous state election officials were alarmed when the commission issued a broad request to states last spring for detailed informatio­n on their voters, including partial Social Security numbers, dates of birth, addresses and voting history.

“The commission was an unpreceden­ted attempt to make it harder for ordinary Americans to vote and have their voices heard,” said Kristen Clarke, head of the Lawyers’ Committee on Civil Rights, which sued alleging the commission violated laws requiring transparen­cy. “In the end, it was a monumental failure on the part of this administra­tion and makes clear that this is an administra­tion that does not place a premium on the right to vote.”

An Associated Press tally showed that 15 states and the District of Columbia refused to turn over the voter data, many citing privacy concerns, and a handful of others had yet to decide by the time Trump ended the commission. Some of the states that pushed back against the commission’s request for voter data were Republican-leaning, including North Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee and Wyoming.

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