[In the message, obtained through a public records request by the Campaign
Legal Center, von Spakovsky wrote:

“We’re also hearing that they are going to make this bipartisan and include
Democrats. There isn’t a single Democratic official that will do anything
other than obstruct any investigation of voter fraud and issue constant
public announcements criticizing the commission and what it is doing,
making claims that it is engaged in voter suppression.”]

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/entry/hans-von-spakovsky-voter-fraud_us_59b95efce4b0edff97188a34

Trump Voter Fraud Commissioner Was Alarmed Democrats Would Have A Say On
Panel
He was also concerned the White House would pick "mainstream Republicans."
 13/09/2017 11:16 PM IST | Updated 19 hours ago

Sam Levine  Associate Politics Editor, HuffPost

A member of President Donald Trump’s voter fraud commission expressed
outrage that Democrats would be appointed to sit on the panel, saying they
would only obstruct its work.

Hans von Spakovsky, a former Justice Department official now at the
conservative Heritage Foundation, wrote the email in February, three months
before Trump announced the creation of the Presidential Advisory Commission
on Election Integrity. Someone forwarded the email to an aide for Attorney
General Jeff Sessions, with a request that it be given to the attorney
general.

In the message, obtained through a public records request by the Campaign
Legal Center, von Spakovsky wrote:

“We’re also hearing that they are going to make this bipartisan and include
Democrats. There isn’t a single Democratic official that will do anything
other than obstruct any investigation of voter fraud and issue constant
public announcements criticizing the commission and what it is doing,
making claims that it is engaged in voter suppression.”

The disclosure is significant because Trump and Vice President Mike Pence,
who is chairing the panel, have said it will have no predetermined
conclusions. Critics say the effort is an attempt to stir up fears of
widespread voter fraud, which previous studies have found is not a
pervasive issue, and will lead to more restrictive voting policies.

In his email, von Spakovsky also expressed concern the White House would
choose “mainstream” Republicans and academics who wouldn’t know anything
about voter fraud.

“There are only a handful of real experts on the conservative side on this
issue and not a single one of them ... have been called other than Kris
Kobach, Secretary of State of Kansas. And we are told some consider him too
‘controversial’ to be on the commission,” von Spakovsky wrote. “If they are
picking mainstream Republican officials and/or academics to man this
commission it will be an abject failure because there aren’t any that know
anything about this or who have paid any attention to the issue over the
years.”

Von Spakovsky initially said he knew nothing about the email when a
ProPublica reporter asked him about it on Tuesday. But the Heritage
Foundation told Gizmodo later on Tuesday that von Spakovsky did, in fact,
author the email.

The email raises new questions about the relationship between the
Department of Justice and the commission. Voting advocates were concerned
earlier this year after the department sent out a request to 44 states
asking for information about compliance with federal voter purge
requirements on the same day Kobach, vice chairman of the commission, sent
a letter to election officials in 50 states asking for voter data. The
Justice Department said the two requests were unrelated.

In a statement on Wednesday, von Spakovsky said he had never discussed the
commission with Sessions.

“I have never had any discussions by email or otherwise with General
Sessions about the election integrity commission,” von Spakovsky wrote. “I
did send a private email in February to private individuals who were not in
the administration to express my personal concerns about the efficacy of
the President’s Advisory Commission on Election Integrity months before it
was organized or any of its members were selected. I did not send it to
General Sessions and was unaware that it had been forwarded to him.”

He added that he was confident in Democratic members of the commission and
in the panel’s work so far.

Voting advocates were concerned by von Spakovsky’s appointment to the
commission, given his role in pushing for voter ID in Georgia, his past
exaggeration of voter fraud and his criticism of the National Voter
Registration Act, a law that protects people from improperly getting kicked
off voter rolls.

Bob Bauer, who served as former President Barack Obama’s White House
counsel from 2009-2011 and co-chaired a previous presidential commission on
elections, said von Spakovsky should resign.

“The Administration chose to appoint to the Commission an individual who
strongly objected to a bipartisan inquiry but also to a formal role for
social scientists trained in data collection and dispassionate analysis.
The story should not end there,” Bauer wrote in a blog post.

“Von Spakovsky may now appreciate that his position on the Commission has
become untenable and that he should resign,” Bauer added. “He has made
clear that he’s open only to Commission ‘fact-finding’ that supports his
well-known beliefs about fraud. If he had imagined he could persuade anyone
to the contrary, he must know that the email puts an end to any such hope.”

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