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Top Election Officials Tell Congress Voter Roll Accuracy Is Improving but Other Issues Remain

Fifty-five days before the Nov. 5 General Election, six secretaries of state from around the country told a congressional committee that they have made progress in securing elections but that more federal funding is required to fix some remaining problems.
The election chiefs described to the House Committee on Administration the successes they have achieved in cleaning up the voter rolls.
Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, testified under oath that, as of March, the Bureau of Elections and local clerks have canceled 800,000 registrations, including those of 532,513 deceased individuals.
According to the site, Michigan has 8.4 million registered voters.
Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd, a Republican, testified that, since 2022, 1 million of his state’s 13.5 million registered voters have either been removed from the rolls or changed to inactive status.
“Properly maintained voter rolls are essential to building confidence in the outcome of an election,” he said.
Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, a Democrat, reported that, since 2020, his state has deactivated roughly 1 million registrations and canceled 724,000 others.
Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican, told the committee that many Ohio voters are upset about the discovery of noncitizens registered and voting in their elections.
“We keep it rare by enforcing the law. The 600 we found on the rolls were removed and referred for prosecution,” he said.
LaRose testified that there are two important citizenship status databases that the federal government is unwilling to provide to the secretaries of state.
“It’s essential that the Biden–Harris administration grant us access to all federal database records necessary for these investigations, which they have yet to do,” he said.
According to LaRose, 135 noncitizens voted in recent Ohio elections.
“The lack of border security compounds the problem,” he said.
On Sept. 9, Byrd wrote a demand letter to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service, requesting that up-to-date citizenship information be provided to help the state ensure that noncitizens are not voting. He said if the agency did not respond, Florida would sue for access.
In August, the Florida Department of State initiated actions to remove 144 noncitizens from the voter rolls.
According to Byrd, all were verified by the state to be noncitizens through the federal government’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program—a system he deemed “insufficient.”
Byrd included in his letter the names of seven additional suspected noncitizens whose names appeared on the voter rolls but whose status could not be verified through SAVE.
While Florida and Ohio are demanding the federal government help them ensure that noncitizens do not vote this November, Benson told the committee that there is “no evidence” of noncitizens voting.
New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver testified: “Noncitizen voting simply does not happen in any systematic way in New Mexico or in the nation more broadly.
“Voters believe noncitizen voting does occur, and this impacts their overall confidence in elections.”
Fontes testified that if a noncitizen uses a federal voter registration form—a process in which voters are not required to show proof of citizenship and where a signed attestation is sufficient—the noncitizen can vote in federal elections but not state elections.
According to Fontes, there are 44,000 federal-only voters in Arizona.
He said that the effort to rectify the situation is complicated and may “reduce the capacity of some U.S. citizens to vote.”
Fontes explained that 44,000 federal voters made up a small fraction of Arizona’s 4.1 million registered voters and cautioned that “paranoia around a fake problem” can lead to the disenfranchisement of some qualified voters.
LaRose said that Ohio publishes data related to voter list maintenance “so private citizens can crowdsource and analyze the data for themselves.”
“Everything is transparent and visible,” he said. “We let people know what we are doing to maintain voter lists.”
On the other hand, the Michigan Bureau of Elections does not divulge the details of its list maintenance plans and methods and has fought a multi-year legal battle with the Public Interest Legal Foundation to keep from disclosing them.
“It was near impossible to discern it wasn’t really me,” he said.
Fontes worried that such schemes could be used to spread bogus election information to the public. He said he favors federal legislation to require any political ad using AI to post a clear declaration in the content that it is being employed.
Benson expressed concern about what she called “unprecedented threats to our election system … from highly sophisticated, foreign-government-aligned entities.”
Oliver of New Mexico testified that “combating nation states” attempting to interfere in elections is an important priority for her office and requested more federal funding to help in the effort.
LaRose said millions of dollars of foreign money had been filtering into Ohio politics and influencing elections until Ohio Gov.Mike DeWine, a Republican, signed a bill prohibiting foreign donations.
West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner, a Republican, testified that his office is cooperating with Marshall University’s Institute for Cyber Security to safeguard the election infrastructure of the state’s 55 counties against cyberattacks.
However, Warner said he was also worried that the hard work put in by state and local election officials is “at serious risk from [domestic] bad actors who attempt to use our government to tip the scales in favor of a candidate or political party.”
He also cited the implementation of election procedures by state executive branch officials without legislative approval as improper interference in the 2020 election.
“We cannot have a secure democracy if we do not protect the security of the people who administer our elections,” she said.
Benson blamed “lies” and “unsubstantiated rhetoric” about the security and accuracy of elections for the hostile work environment.
Oliver said that false election claims and ideological attempts to discredit voting processes are “now colored by conspiracies, misinformation, and outright lies.”
She said the false information leads to increased threats and harassment of election workers and sometimes “political violence.”
An already difficult situation is compounded by what Oliver called “frivolous and burdensome public information requests.”
Benson, Oliver, and Fontes each testified that more federal funding for elections is needed, with Fontes urging the committee, “We implore you … to fund elections.”
Ranking Democrat member Joe Morelle (D-N.Y.) spoke of one jurisdiction that experienced a 600 percent increase in threats to election officials.
Rep. Greg Murphy (R-N.C.) commented that threats to members of Congress have increased by “300 to 400” percent.
Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Wash.) worried that there has been inadequate election planning to deal with a hypothetical mass casualty event that could potentially take out hundreds of members of Congress, thereby paralyzing the federal government.
Rep. Norma Torres (D-Calif.) told the hearing that election workers have seen a rise in dangerous threats and harassment because of constant misinformation and disinformation.
Congressman Anthony D’Esposito (R-N.Y.) criticized the idea that the number of noncitizens voting in elections is insignificant.
“Many elections come down to just dozens of votes,” he said.

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