When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary to
say no to one’s own party, not many have the courage. On the day before the
United States celebrated its independence for the 241st time,
Wyoming Secretary of State Ed Murray took a courageously independent stand for
freedom.
Recently President Trump created a federal agency to bolster
his false, self-serving claim that he’d have won the popular vote but for
millions of illegal votes cast for Hillary Clinton. The Secretary of State in
Kansas, Kris Kobach made a name for himself hunting down voters committing
fraud. He found about a dozen out of well over a million votes cast.
Still, Kobach’s Quixotic crusade caught the attention of the
President. Trump appointed Kobach Vice Chair of his Orwellian titled
Presidential Commission on Election Integrity.
Creation of the commission itself was a slap in the face of
every Secretary of State in the nation. Their primary job is to make sure elections
are fair. The largest majority are Republicans who care as much as their
Democratic colleagues that the electoral system is conducted with integrity.
They have done this job diligently.
Nonetheless, the President alleges millions voted illegally in
2016. Those closest to the process are the Secretaries of State, people like Ed
Murray. It is their credibility at stake when the President makes such
demonstrably false claims.
Their credibility was unfairly challenged when, without statutory
authority, Kobach casually sent a letter to state elections officials demanding
they produce reams of personal and private information on every voter.
Ed Murray said no. “It’s not sitting well with me,” he
declared, giving voice to state’s rights and the privacy of his constituents.
Wyoming’s Secretary of State worried aloud whether this request “could lead to
some federal overreach.” Indeed, that is where this commission is headed.
Ed Murray was first elected to this job in 2014. Wyoming
assigns its Secretary of State a variety of responsibilities. The job
description includes registering and monitoring corporations and others doing
business in the state. The Secretary of State serves alongside the other four
state elected officials on numerous boards and commissions. He also serves as
Acting Governor when the Governor is out of state.
Of these duties, none is more important than making certain elections
are free and clean. There’s never been a legitimate claim that they are not.
The same is true in every other state, which renders the need for this federal
commission suspect.
The request for private information, including portions of
your social security number and voter history, is not only invasive and in
violation of many state laws, but the President’s commission has neither the
authority to make the request nor any legitimate need for the information.
Connecticut’s election head made a poignant counter-request
of the federal commission, asking it to share “any memos, meeting minutes, or
additional information as state officials have not been told precisely what the
Commission is looking for. This lack of openness is all the more concerning,
considering that the Vice Chair of the Commission, Kris Kobach, has a lengthy
record of illegally disenfranchising eligible voters in Kansas.”
Murray’s decision is courageous, deserving of the support
and gratitude of Wyoming citizens who understand the importance of the
sovereignty of state governments in the context of the American Republic.
Pause for a moment. Consider the abundance of conspiracy
theories and the explosion of outrage that would have followed such a letter
from the Obama administration. Though a Republican, Trump apparently never read
the memo explaining how his Party jealously guards states’ rights and personal
privacy.
Attempting to bully states into providing this information,
Trump Twittered, “Numerous states are refusing to give information to the very
distinguished VOTER FRAUD PANEL,” he Tweeted. “What are they trying to hide?”
Hiding our private information from the government is not a
vice. It’s an American value with which this President may not be familiar.
Thanks to Ed Murray, he’s been given a lesson on how much it matters.
Voting rights are a cornerstone of democracy. Should we fail to have faith in our system of voting is to lose faith in our democracy itself.
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