Description: Kobach Rising... Kris Kobach who as Kansas secretary of state repeatedly made unsubstantiated voter fraud allegations will co-chair President Donald Trumps new Commission on Election Integrity igniting instant outrage from civil rights groups and top Democrats. Critics ridiculed the very creation of the commission on Thursday as well as Kobachs role saying its all intended to perpetuate the presidents false claim that millions voted illegally in November. The 12-member bipartisan commission will review claims of improper registrations and voting fraudulent registrations and voter suppression White House officials told McClatchy. Members will provide the president with a report in 2018 and may issue recommendations to the states. Its a sham charged critics. Putting an extremist like Mr. Kobach at the helm of this commission is akin to putting an arsonist in charge of the fire department charged Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer D-N.Y. The American Civil Liberties Union called on election administrators academics and other public servants to refuse to participate in the commission. The group also filed a Freedom of Information Act request seeking information that the Trump administration used as the basis for its voter fraud claims The panel is nothing but a pretext for disenfranchising Americans said Dale Ho director of the ACLUs Voting Rights Project. We have a president who has said he won the popular vote when he did not Ho said. We have a commission that will be led for all intents and purposes by the king of voter suppression Kris Kobach. So theres no reason to believe that this commission will be anything other than a sham. In an interview with McClatchys Kansas City Star Kobach rejected the idea the commission was created specifically to validate Trumps voter fraud claims. The commission does not begin with foregone conclusions he said. All members of the commission are approaching it with an open mindthe objective is to go where the facts lead us. Almost immediately after his victory in November Trump said that millions of people had voted illegally and deprived him of a popular-vote win. He also said that there was unspecified voter fraud in three states he lost: California New Hampshire and Virginia. Independent fact-checkers mocked Trump for the voter fraud allegations saying there was no evidence. Trumps team cited two-year-old reports that did not point to fraud even then. Trump told FOX News in January that he would establish a commission to be led by Vice President Mike Pence to investigate voter fraud. Pence will chair the commission created on Thursday but Kobachs role is expected to be significant. Pences office did not immediately respond to questions. While other secretaries of state as well as government and academic studies say occurrences of voter fraud are rare Kellyanne Conway and other top Trump advisers cited Kobach as the source of the presidents unsupported claim that millions of illegal votes tipped the popular vote in Democrat Hillary Clintons favor. So far Kobach has provided no hard evidence of widespread voter fraud. The author of one study he cited the Cooperative Congressional Elections Study has said it actually shows a rate of noncitizen voting of about zero. Related stories from the McClatchy DC Kobach said his position on the new commission would be part-time and unpaid aside from travel reimbursement but the commission would have full-time staff from the vice presidents office and the Department of Homeland Security. He said it would not interfere with his duties as Kansas secretary of state. The commission will produce the most expansive study of voter fraud to date he said. This is really a first-of-its-kind enterprise for the first time having a national body gather data from all 50 states Kobach said. Clay Barker the executive director of the Kansas Republican Party said Kobach is a good pick to lead the new commission. Hes obviously very intelligent and hes spent a lot of time digging into elections and different ways there can be problems with voters whether its voter fraud or unintentional mistakes Barker said. EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE Rick Hasen an election law expert at the University of California Irvine said any commission studying the white hot issue of voter fraud should be headed by a bipartisan leaders commanding respect. It should include professionals who study election administration Hasen said. And it should avoid people who have made a name for themselves by hyping false or wildly exaggerated claims of voter fraud. Although bipartisan in name Trumps commission will provide cover for Republican efforts to suppress voter turnout particularly among minority voters said Jason Kander a Kansas City Democrat who founded Let America Vote a national organization dedicated to defending voting rights. For over a decade Kander said the Republican Party has made it a central part of their political strategy to push the myth of widespread voter fraud when the real problem theyre trying to solve is there are certain groups of Americans who are unlikely to vote Republican. Kobach is the only secretary of state in the nation with prosecutorial power. During his tenure as Kansas top election official he has championed some of the strictest voting laws in the country including the states controversial proof of citizenship law. That law requires voters to provide a birth certificate or passport to register. Hes successfully prosecuted nine cases of voter fraud in Kansas since he took office six years ago most recently the conviction of a man for voting in both Kansas and Texas. Preston Glen Christensen pleaded guilty and paid a $1000 fine and court costs. Kobach also expanded and continues to oversee the Interstate Crosscheck Program which is used by 32 states to identify duplicative voters. Critics of the program say it has resulted in false positives. Kobach said Thursday that Crosscheck will be releasing its analysis of the 2016 election in the near future and that there will be data relevant to Trumps voter fraud claims. Kobach who is weighing a run for governor in Kansas has turned the typically sleepy secretary of states office into a platform to push conservative policies. He served as informal adviser to Trump on immigration and election issues and said in the past he advised Trump to investigate voter fraud. Judges who have ruled against Kobach in voting rights cases have accused him of engaging in word play meant to present a materially inaccurate picture of the documents and dismissed his assertions about voter fraud because they were backed by scant evidence or based on pure speculation. After the election Kobach appeared to be a contender to lead the Department of Homeland Security. He was photographed taking a plan for the agency into a Nov. 20 meeting with Trump. The plan which was only partially visible in the photo included a reference to voter rolls. That plan is now part of a legal battle between Kobach and the ACLU which is seeking its disclosure as part of an ongoing lawsuit against a Kansas law that requires voters to provide proof of citizenship such as a birth certificate or passport when they register to vote. The ACLU argued that if Kobach lobbied Trump on changes to the National Voter Registration Act then the documents may contain material relevant to the case. A U.S. federal magistrate judge in April ordered Kobach to turn over the plan. On Wednesday a U.S. federal district court judge upheld the order and gave Kobach until Friday to produce the document. Kobach said that the documents in the case with the ACLU are not related to the commission. He has still not decided whether to appeal to the 10th Circuit. He says the documents arent nearly as exciting as all of the briefing on them suggests. Anita Kumar in Washington and The Wichita Eagles Jonathan Shorman in Topeka Kansas contributed to this article.
By Frankie Cordeira Jr.
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By Frankie Cordeira Jr.
Pinned to Domestic and Global News on Pinterest
Found on: http://ift.tt/2qZaRzQ