The Mercury News

State rebuffs second Trump commission voter data request

- By Sophia Bollag

California’s secretary of state says he won’t comply with a second request for voter data from President Donald Trump’s commission investigat­ing alleged voter fraud.

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the commission’s vice chairman, sent a letter to California Secretary of State Alex Padilla on Wednesday asking again for voters’ names, party affiliatio­ns, addresses and voting histories if state law allows that informatio­n to be public.

In June, the commission requested the data for voters in all 50 states. Padilla and officials in at least 16 other states have refused. Some said they worried providing the data would undermine voters’ privacy and said the commission is politicall­y motivated.

Trump formed the commission after he claimed without evidence that millions of people voted illegally in the 2016 election. Trump, a Republican, lost the popular vote to Democrat Hillary Clinton.

The new request was crafted to address some of the concerns raised by Padilla and others, Kobach wrote. The commission will keep the data confidenti­al, he said.

“The Commission will approach all of its work without preconceiv­ed conclusion­s or prejudgmen­ts,” he wrote.

Padilla, a Democrat, refused to comply again and called the commission a “sham.”

“The commission’s new request does nothing to address the fundamenta­l problems with the commission’s illegitima­te origins, questionab­le mission or the preconceiv­ed and harmful views on voting rights that many of its commission­ers have advanced,” Padilla said in a statement.

Kobach’s requests have prompted multiple lawsuits.

On Tuesday, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia denied a privacy advocacy group’s request for a temporary restrainin­g order to prevent the commission from receiving the voter informatio­n.

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