海角大神

This article appeared in the July 06, 2017 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 07/06 edition

Monitor Daily Intro for July 6, 2017

Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

Lots of attention has been paid to the Trump Election Integrity Commission鈥檚 request to states for voter data 鈥 and the tally of that have said they are unable to comply, in whole or in part. (That includes Kansas, the home state of commission head Kris Kobach.)

But a second letter went out the same day, this time from the Department of Justice. And voting-rights experts are concerned that its significance is being overshadowed by the commission headlines. The letter was sent to all 44 states covered by the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, asking them to detail how they maintain their voter eligibility lists.

鈥淚f this went to any individual state, I don鈥檛 think anybody would鈥檝e blinked twice,鈥 Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola Law School and former deputy assistant attorney general,聽 What made the letter 鈥渞eally weird,鈥 he said, was the sheer number it was sent to.

The question of how to properly update voter rolls 鈥 without suppressing legitimate votes 鈥 after people move or die is one that needs to be approached carefully, . 鈥淏eing careful would include not removing people right before an election, giving voters targeted for removal notice before they are removed, being very sure that two different people with similar names are not confused for each other, and ensuring that voters have an easy way to get back on the rolls on Election Day if they are mistakenly purged.鈥

Our Southern staff writer, Patrik Jonsson, is in Sparta, Ga., today working on a story about how that city wound up purging roughly one-fifth of its voters from the rolls 鈥 and what happened after. Watch for that soon.聽


This article appeared in the July 06, 2017 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 07/06 edition
You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.