Investigation on Trump voter commission by GAO
The Government Accountability
Office will investigate President Donald Trump's voting commission after a
request by Democratic senators.
Colorado Sen. Michael
Bennet published the letter he received from GAO confirming the
investigation, which the Democrat asked for with colleagues Minnesota Sen. Amy
Klobuchar and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker.
The three lawmakers wrote to
the government watchdog last week asking them to look into federal funds used
to support the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, the
body's work on voter participation, what information and methodology the
commission is using for its conclusions, how it is protecting any voter
information collected and how it is following regulations.
In its response this week, GAO
said the work was "within the scope of its authority" and would begin in about five months, based on agency staffing.
Trump ordered the creation of the
commission after pledging to work to preserve the integrity of elections. It
has been controversial since its inception, which occurred in the wake of Trump
making baseless claims about rampant voter fraud during the 2016 election.
Experts who have studied election integrity have found that voter fraud is so
statistically rare it is virtually non-existent, though proponents of strict
voter verification measures point to a greater potential for fraud than may
have been discovered.
The commission is also staffed
with controversial figures who have advocated for strict voting measures and
have spoken of widespread fraud, including the commission's vice chairman,
Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach. The panel is chaired by Vice President
Mike Pence.
The group has met twice, and no
third meeting has been scheduled. After its second meeting, emails of one of
the commission's hard line members, Heritage scholar Hans von Spakovsky, were
released that showed he had demanded the panel not include any Democrats
or "mainstream" members in a February message that made its way at
least to Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Von Spakovsky was named to the panel
months later.
The administration has defended
the panel as pursuing the integrity of elections and not having a partisan
objective.
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