The Sentinel-Record

Foes wary as Trump hands election probe over to Homeland Security

- JOHN HANNA

TOPEKA, Kan. — Voting rights advocates and some state election officials cheered President Donald Trump’s announceme­nt that he was disbanding his election fraud commission, but their celebratio­n could be short-lived.

Trump spiked the commission late Wednesday amid infighting and refusals by numerous states to cooperate, but at the same time transferre­d its mission to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. That concerns some election officials and experts who had been critical of the commission.

DHS could have broad legal authority to conduct an investigat­ion into Trump’s unfounded claims of widespread voter fraud. That’s because of a declaratio­n at the end of President Barack Obama’s administra­tion that election infrastruc­ture is vital to national security.

“I am deeply concerned that the work is being shifted over to DHS where it can be done behind closed doors and without the sunshine offered from open public scrutiny,” Vermont Secretary of State Jim Condos, a Democrat, said in a statement Thursday to The Associated Press.

Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Thursday that the White House would send the commission’s preliminar­y findings to the department “and make determinat­ions on the best way forward from that point.”

Asked why the task was going to Homeland Security and not another agency, Sanders said: “That was the agency that was best determined by the administra­tion and we’re moving forward and letting them take over the process.”

Condos said the move “only fuels fears of a federal takeover” of elections, which are overseen by the states and carried out by thousands of local jurisdicti­ons. The decentrali­zed nature of the country’s elections has been seen as a buffer against attempts at widespread manipulati­on.

The commission’s vice chairman, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, said the work done by DHS is likely to be less public.

Trump convened the commission in May to investigat­e the 2016 presidenti­al election after repeatedly making unsubstant­iated claims that between 3 million and 5 million illegally cast ballots had cost him the popular vote. Trump won the Electoral College.

Trump said in tweets early Thursday that the states, mostly Democratic leaning, “fought hard that the Commission not see their records or methods because they know that many people are voting illegally.”

An AP tally showed 15 states and the District of Columbia denied the commission’s request for detailed voter data, some of which are Republican-leaning. Those include North Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee and Wyoming. The commission initially requested partial Social Security numbers, dates of birth, addresses, voting history and other informatio­n before criticism forced it to scale back its request.

States’ reasons for denying the request varied. They included concerns that the commission’s ultimate goal was voter suppressio­n primarily targeting the poor and minorities, voter privacy and issues of states’ rights.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what direction the Department of Homeland Security would take.

“At the President’s direction, the Department continues to work in support of state government­s who are responsibl­e for administer­ing elections, with efforts focused on securing elections against those who seek to undermine the election system or its integrity,” DHS spokesman Tyler Houlton said in an email to the AP.

Kobach and other Republican­s have pushed for state laws requiring voters to show photo ID at the polls or to provide papers documentin­g U.S. citizenshi­p to register.

The Kansas secretary of state’s prominent role on the commission fueled opposition to it. Kansas has some of the nation’s toughest voter ID laws, and Kobach has been enmeshed in multiple lawsuits. Before Trump took office, Kobach took a proposal into a meeting with the president-elect laying out ideas for changing federal laws to make it easier for states to impose such requiremen­ts.

On Thursday, Kobach told the AP that the Department of Homeland Security could move forward by checking its list of non-citizens living in the U.S. against voter registrati­on data.

“The work will continue, but now it will continue in a forum where they won’t have a seat at the table, and so really all they’ve done is taken themselves away from the table,” he said of his critics. “It’s hugely ironic.”

But Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes, a Democrat and vocal critic of the commission, said it is “prepostero­us” for any review of Trump’s “false claims” to continue.

“It’s time to put an end to this useless exercise designed to soothe his insecuriti­es about losing the popular vote in 2016,” she said.

While there have been isolated cases of people voting illegally and many voter rolls contain outdated data, there is no evidence voter fraud is anywhere as widespread a problem in the U.S. as Trump has suggested. Past studies have found voter fraud to be exceptiona­lly rare.

New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver, a Democrat, said in a statement that she hopes the Department of Homeland Security focuses on non-partisan election security issues “like foreign interferen­ce and cybersecur­ity.”

Wendy Weiser, director of the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, a critic of the commission, questioned whether the declaratio­n that election infrastruc­ture is vital to national security gives DHS authority for a broad investigat­ion of domestic voting issues. She also said the department is going to face similar obstacles in seeking informatio­n from the states.

Massachuse­tts Secretary of State William Galvin — who refused to hand over voter informatio­n to the commission — said DHS would have to show a legitimate reason for wanting the state’s voter data. If it doesn’t, the Democrat said he would fight any request in court.

“This just points out the folly of those who gave (the commission) records, because why would you want Homeland Security to have personal informatio­n on voters?” Galvin said. “These aren’t suspects, they’re citizens.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? DISBANDED: Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach discusses the disbanding of President Donald Trump’s election fraud commission during an interview Thursday in Topeka, Kan. Kobach was the commission’s vice chairman and says attacks on it only led Trump...
The Associated Press DISBANDED: Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach discusses the disbanding of President Donald Trump’s election fraud commission during an interview Thursday in Topeka, Kan. Kobach was the commission’s vice chairman and says attacks on it only led Trump...

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