Three more states refuse Trump
commission's voter data request
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[July 05, 2017]
By Ian Simpson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Maryland, Delaware
and Louisiana on Monday joined a growing number of U.S. states that have
refused to hand over voter data to a commission established by President
Donald Trump to investigate possible voting fraud.
More than 20 states, including Virginia, Kentucky, California, New York
and Massachusetts, have declined to provide some or all of the
information that the panel requested, saying it was unnecessary and
violated privacy.
Republican Trump created the Presidential Advisory Commission on
Election Integrity in May after making unsubstantiated claims that
millions of people voted illegally for his Democratic rival, Hillary
Clinton, in last November's election.
Calling the request "repugnant," Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh
said in a statement that his office had advised the State Board of
Elections that the commission's request was illegal.
The request "appears designed only to intimidate voters and to indulge
President Trump’s fantasy that he won the popular vote," Frosh said.
The commission sent a letter to the 50 states asking them to turn over
voter information including names, the last four digits of Social
Security numbers, addresses, birth dates, political affiliations, felony
convictions and voting histories.
Louisiana Secretary of State Tom Schedler said the presidential
commission could purchase the limited information legally available to
candidates running for office.
"You're not going to play politics with Louisiana’s voter data," he said
in a statement.
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A poll worker places a mail in ballot into a voting box as voters
drop off their ballot in the U.S. presidential primary election in
San Diego, California, United States June 7, 2016. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo
Delaware Elections Commissioner Elaine Manlove said in an interview
with Milford's WXDE-FM radio that her office would not comply since
some of the information was confidential. Manlove said she was
working with the attorney general's office to see if the request
could be denied completely.
Trump has blasted the states who have refused to turn over the data.
He said in a tweet on Saturday, "What are they trying to hide?"
Trump won the White House through victory in the Electoral College,
which tallies wins in states, but he lost the popular vote to
Clinton by some 3 million votes. He has claimed he would have won
the popular vote had it not been for voter fraud.
Civil rights activists say the commission will encourage voter
suppression by justifying new barriers to voting, such as requiring
identity cards to vote.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington; Editing by Frank McGurty
and Grant McCool)
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