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Texas’ election chief defends sharing flawed non-citizen list

Texas’ election chief on Thursday defended giving prosecutors a list of 95,000 potential noncitizens on the state’s voter rolls before vetting the information, which turned out to wrongly include scores of people who were naturalized before casting legal ballots.

Secretary of State David Whitley deflected sharp questions from Texas lawmakers over whether his office made mistakes in his first public comments since his office in January called into question the citizenship of tens of thousands of voters since 1996. Nearly 58,000 of those voters were said to have cast a ballot at least once, but those numbers quickly unraveled .

Within days, local officials found that the list wrongly included scores of naturalized citizens, setting off accusations from Democrats and Latino rights groups of attempted voter suppression and launching another heated voting rights battle in Texas.

“I will readily level with you that we can always improve the process,” Whitley said. “But the data is what the data is, and we were confident that was the best data we could get.”

Whitley was appointed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in December and is facing confirmation by the Texas Senate. He was pressed over why his office immediately turned the numbers over to Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, explaining he wanted to get the information “in the hands of someone who could do something with it.”

Three days later, Paxton sent a campaign fundraising email to supporters with the headline, “VOTER FRAUD ALERT.”

President Donald Trump also seized on the original announcement to renew his unsubstantiated claims of rampant voter fraud.

Whitley said the goal is to have accurate voter rolls but said had no update on how much the original list has shrunk. Democrats zeroed in on the whiff of politics.

“If you weren’t at least attempting to create the appearance of illegal activity, then there’s no reason or explanation for immediately referring 95,000 people to the Office of the Attorney General,” asked Sen. Kirk Watson, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Nominations Committee.

Whitley defended the referral by saying his office has no authority to prosecute cases or investigate a person’s citizenship. He later told Watson it “sounds reasonable” to ask Paxton’s office to not open cases into any names on the list but stopped short of committing to do so.

“My goal was to ensure that folks who could actually do something with it actually had this data in their hands,” Whitley said. “The attorney general has statewide jurisdiction in enforcing election law. We do not.”

The release of the faulty information – and the GOP’s amplification of it as potential proof of widespread election fraud – plunged the state into another battle over voting rights.

On Wednesday night, the ACLU asked a federal judge for an injunction to stop Texas’ 254 counties from questioning registered voters about their citizenship based on the list. Another lawsuit was filed by Texas voters whose names erroneously appeared on the original list sent to local election officials.

Texas officials say they matched registered voters against records of noncitizens with state IDs. But they failed to exclude scores of people who legally cast ballots only after becoming U.S. citizens.

Many of the voting and civil rights groups suing Texas have a have a long history of battling Republican leaders over gerrymandered maps and one of the toughest voter ID laws in the country. Paxton has also made election fraud a priority of his office, which helped prosecute a Mexican national who was sentenced to 8 years in prison in 2017 for illegal voting and now faces deportation.

Whitley, who was previously Abbott’s deputy chief of staff, does not face certain confirmation despite Republicans controlling the Senate. He will likely need some Democrats to reach the two-thirds threshold needed for confirmation the day of the vote, which remains uncertain.

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Follow Paul J. Weber on Twitter: www.twitter.com/pauljweber

(Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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