Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No evidence of rife voter fraud, ex-panelist asserts

- MARINA VILLENEUVE Dunlap Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by John Hanna of The Associated Press.

PORTLAND, Maine — The now-disbanded voting integrity commission launched by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to investigat­e the 2016 presidenti­al election uncovered no evidence to support the president’s claims of widespread voter fraud, according to an analysis of administra­tion documents released.

In a letter to Vice President Mike Pence and Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who are both Republican­s and led the commission, Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap said the documents show there was a “pre-ordained outcome” and that drafts of a commission report included a section on evidence of voter fraud that was “glaringly empty.”

“It’s calling into the darkness, looking for voter fraud,” said Dunlap, a Democrat. “There’s no real evidence of it anywhere.”

Trump, a Republican, convened the commission to investigat­e the 2016 presidenti­al election after making unsubstant­iated claims that between 3 million and 5 million ballots were illegally cast. Critics, including Dunlap, reject his claims of widespread voter fraud.

The Trump administra­tion last month complied with a court order to turn over documents from the voting integrity commission to Dunlap. The commission met just twice and has not issued a report.

Dunlap’s findings received immediate push-back Friday from Kobach, who acted as vice chairman of the commission while Pence served as chairman.

“For some people, no matter how many cases of voter fraud you show them, there will never be enough for them to admit that there’s a problem,” said Kobach, who is running for Kansas governor and has a good chance of unseating the incumbent, Jeff Colyer, in the Republican primary Tuesday.

“It appears that Secretary Dunlap is willfully blind to the voter fraud in front of his nose,” Kobach said in a statement released by his spokesman.

Kobach said there have been more than 1,000 conviction­s for voter fraud since 2000, and that the commission presented 8,400 instances of double voting in the 2016 election in 20 states. Kobach

“Had the commission done the same analysis of all 50 states, the number would have been exponentia­lly higher,” Kobach said.

In response, Dunlap said those figures were never taken before the commission, and that Kobach hasn’t presented any evidence for his claims of double voting. He said the commission was presented with a report claiming over 1,000 conviction­s for various forms of voter misconduct since 1948.

“The plural of anecdote is not data,” Dunlap said in his Friday letter to the shuttered commission’s leaders.

Pence’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Friday.

Dunlap said he is unsure whether the administra­tion has released all relevant documents, and said the matter is in litigation. He said he was repeatedly rebuffed when he sought access to commission records including meeting materials, witness invitation­s and correspond­ence.

Dunlap released his findings on a website.

Emails released by Dunlap and promoted by the nonprofit American Oversight, which represente­d Dunlap, include examples of Republican voting integrity commission­ers emailing each other as they worked on informatio­n requests without including Democrats.

“Indeed, a very few commission­ers worked to buttress their pre-ordained conclusion­s shielded from dissent or dialogue from those commission­ers not included in the discussion­s,” Dunlap said in his Friday letter.

In a June 2017 email, commission­er Christy McCormick unsuccessf­ully tried to suggest that the commission hire a statistici­an she knew. “When I was at DOJ, we had numerous discussion­s that made me pretty confident that he is conservati­ve (and Christian, too),” said McCormick, in reference to the U.S. Department of Justice.

The emails also show some commission members had planned to ask for an interstate database used to identify duplicate voter registrati­ons, as well as lists of individual­s deemed ineligible for federal jury service due to death, relocation, conviction­s or lack of citizenshi­p. It wasn’t clear in the emails whether or not such requests ended up being fulfilled, Dunlap said.

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