USA TODAY US Edition

Conspiracy theories imperil voter system

Accuse ERIC program of manipulati­ng votes

- Erin Mansfield

When a far-right disinforma­tion campaign targeted a little-known data tool that helps states update their voter files, people lit up election officials’ phone lines and inboxes.

The conspiracy theories accused the program, called Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center, or ERIC, of trying to manipulate votes, and falsely painted a prominent Democratic donor as a shadowy financier pulling the organizati­on’s strings.

“It kind of went viral,” said Michael Adams, Kentucky’s Republican secretary of state. “And so, suddenly, I’m getting all kinds of messages. The legislator­s I’m working with are getting all kinds of messages. And everyone’s panicking.”

The messages, Adams said, were “just Kookytown.”

“Evil Soros is always working ‘Against America,’ ” someone wrote in comments on a far-right website that falsely tied the organizati­on to billionair­e George Soros, a popular target of antisemiti­c conspiracy theories.

“This only reinforces the very likely claim that the 2020 election was rigged and the presidency stolen from Trump,” another said. “Time to hang traitors,” said another.

Then came former President Donald Trump on Truth Social: “All Republican Governors should immediatel­y pull out of ERIC, the terrible Voter Registrati­on System that ‘pumps the rolls’ for Democrats.”

None of the informatio­n was true. But in a chain reaction, nine states, all led by Republican secretarie­s of state, dropped out of the program. What was once a bipartisan tool that helped states fight voter fraud became a lightning rod of polarizati­on that was less and less useful for the remaining states.

A meltdown − and a pivotal election year

The meltdown happened during the first presidenti­al election cycle since Trump and his allies denied that he lost the 2020 election – and peddled conspiracy theories about dead voters haunting the rolls and false tales of voter fraud in Democratic cities.

Now, states are forced to consider whether it is worth their money and time to continue using ERIC. And they’re struggling to recruit other states to join to make the program more effective.

“We want everybody in it,” Adams, the Kentucky secretary of state, said. “The more the merrier in terms of getting more informatio­n and our dues going lower. As many as we can add, it behooves us.”

What is ERIC? Georgia says it’s the best

The Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center is a consortium that started in 2012 when seven states banded together to improve how they remove people who have died or moved from their voter rolls, something federal law requires. Member states fund ERIC through dues.

“It is the most effective, cost-efficient list maintenanc­e tool that anyone has ever come up with, bar none,” said Mike Hassinger, a spokespers­on for the Georgia secretary of state’s office. “They can

be sure that their vote is being cast accurately and securely, and that people who are not supposed to be voting in that particular election are not.”

The idea was to have the states send voter registrati­on and driver’s license data to a staff of data experts, who would cross-reference the collected informatio­n with federal databases to learn which voters had died or moved. The staff would use security tools to guard the personal informatio­n involved in the analysis.

Keeping voter lists up to date helps prevent voter fraud because someone cannot, for example, vote using their registrati­on in the state where they live and then vote a second time using an old registrati­on in a state where they used to live. They also are less likely to be able to vote using a dead person’s registrati­on.

There was another use for all the data they were crunching: Identifyin­g citizens who were likely eligible to vote but weren’t registered. So ERIC required member states to reach out to those nonvoters, such as by sending a postcard, with instructio­ns on how they could register to vote. Some Republican officials have more recently bridled at this outreach requiremen­t.

ERIC’s membership peaked at 34 states and the District of Columbia. Through 2023, ERIC confirmed 12.5 million records from voters moving across state lines and almost 600,000 records for dead people.

Matt Heckel, spokespers­on for the Pennsylvan­ia Department of State, said in a statement that ERIC has helped remove more than 130,000 duplicate records and registrati­ons for voters who had moved to another state.

“Despite the baseless conspiracy theories and disinforma­tion being spread about a program that every member state previously touted as a bipartisan success story that promotes clean voter rolls, the department believes strongly in the value of the data we receive and remains committed to ERIC,” Heckel said.

Hassinger said Georgia pays about $89,000 a year to participat­e in ERIC, based on the volume of records the state uses. He called ERIC more accurate, more secure, and “more up-to-date than anything else that can be provided.”

He said his office gets emails and comments through social media making false claims about ERIC, in addition to phone calls and letters. But he’s not concerned.

“They’re universall­y incorrect,” Hassinger said. “They make assumption­s that are not true, or they misunderst­and how ERIC works. We’re not leaving ERIC.”

Five years after joining, Missouri is glad it left

Missouri Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft said he has no regrets about leaving ERIC. The Republican was the third election official, after counterpar­ts in Louisiana and Alabama, to announce his state’s departure. He brought Florida and West Virginia with him. Ohio, Virginia, Iowa and Texas followed.

While Louisiana Secretary of State Kyle Ardoin said he decided to leave over concerns “about potential questionab­le funding sources and that possibly partisan actors may have access to ERIC network data for political purposes,” Ashcroft said his reasons were more practical.

“The decision was made to essentiall­y give Missouri and the Missouri taxpayers the middle finger, so I left,” he said. “I worked to try to make changes so that ERIC could be what it was supposed to be or what it was said to be.”

Ashcroft, who is now a candidate for governor, led the state into ERIC in 2018, and said in a press release at the time that the program would “help affirm voters are eligible and registered in the right location, identify potential duplicate registrati­ons and identify unregister­ed voters so we can help them get registered.”

Ashcroft declined to say who won the 2020 election. His letter announcing the state’s departure from ERIC included a list of operationa­l concerns, but it also criticized an advisory member of ERIC’s board as “hyper-partisan.”

That board member, David Becker, had been targeted in a misinforma­tion campaign by a nonprofit run by Trump ally Cleta Mitchell.

Mitchell’s group, the Election Integrity Network, said Becker was part of “the Zuckerbuck­s election-manipulati­on scheme in 2020,” a conspiracy theory that Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg rigged the election by donating to nonprofits that trained election offices on new technology and helped mobilize voters. Becker runs one of the groups Zuckerberg donated to.

Ashcroft said in an interview he was not motivated by false claims that ERIC was tied to Soros. He said his office had a process to clean voter rolls before it joined ERIC, and since leaving, uses an in-house technology staff. He’s not in a rush to join another database consortium and said that any program he joins would be nonpartisa­n.

“We are continuing to refine what we do internally, and it appears that it’s better than what we were getting from ERIC,” he said.

Kentucky is considerin­g leaving but asks New York and New Hampshire to join

Adams, the Kentucky secretary of state, said he’s giving it a few more months before he decides whether the state should leave ERIC. He still believes in its mission, but finds it less useful and more expensive since the recent exodus.

People who move out of state tend to go to neighborin­g states, and Illinois is the only remaining state in ERIC that borders Kentucky. Missouri, Ohio and West Virginia left in the past two years, and Tennessee and Indiana never joined.

“My concern has been, ‘Are we going to lose access to the informatio­n that we need?’ and, ‘Are we going to pay more for the privilege of having lost the informatio­n?’” Adams said. “The more states that leave it, the less data we get, and the more we have to pay in dues.”

Adams pointed to an effort to clean voter rolls in 2021 when his staff removed more than 10,000 dead people. They lived in Florida at the time they died, he said, and his staff was able to take them off the rolls because Florida was part of ERIC. Florida left ERIC in 2023. Now he’s trying to work with the state directly to get the informatio­n he would’ve gotten through ERIC.

In the meantime, Adams said he signed on to letters urging New York and New Hampshire to join ERIC. Both states’ legislatur­es have considered bills to join the compact. Virginia’s legislatur­e passed a bill to rejoin ERIC, but the governor vetoed it.

David Scanlan, the Secretary of State in New Hampshire, does not support joining ERIC and testified against the state’s bill. A key committee declined to endorse it, making it unlikely the state will join anytime soon.

Scanlan said he’s concerned about turning over the state’s driver’s license data and voter registrati­on data to ERIC. “We lose control of that data once it’s in a third party’s hands,” he said. “I know they say they keep it secure and safe and everything, but we’re also living in a time of heightened concern.”

His other issue is an ERIC requiremen­t that participat­ing states reach out to eligible voters who aren’t registered. He said the New Hampshire legislatur­e should be the one to require an outreach policy, not a third-party organizati­on.

“I know that ERIC has been politicize­d because there were, I think nine, Republican-controlled states that left the program, but that occurrence really has no bearing on my thought process,” Scanlan said.

 ?? USA TODAY NETWORK ?? A voter steps into the voting booth at the Milford Senior Center in Milford, Mass., on March 5.
USA TODAY NETWORK A voter steps into the voting booth at the Milford Senior Center in Milford, Mass., on March 5.
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Mitchell
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Adams

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