Ohio on Friday announced it was the latest Republican-led state to pull out of a key election partnership that has become the focal point of conspiracies on the far-right.
The Ohio secretary of state, Frank LaRose — a Republican who is widely considered to be eyeing a run for U.S. Senate in 2024 — sent a letter to the executive director of the Electronic Registration Information Center, or ERIC, announcing the decision soon after the bipartisan compact’s member states held a meeting Friday.
“ERIC has chosen repeatedly to ignore demands to embrace reforms that would bolster confidence in its performance, encourage growth in its membership, and ensure not only its present stability but also its durability,” LaRose wrote. “Rather, you have chosen to double-down on poor strategic decisions, which have only resulted in the transformation of a previously bipartisan organization to one that appears to favor only the interests of one political party.”
ERIC is a multi-state partnership that experts across the political spectrum say is the only reliable, secure way for states to share voter data with each other. The coalition allows states to know when voters move or die, so they can keep their lists of registered voters more up to date.
Just last month, in an interview with NPR, LaRose called ERIC “one of the best tools that we have for maintaining the accuracy of our voter files.”
But beginning last year, far-right media began to target the organization, arguing that it was actually a way Democrats were rigging elections in their favor. Ohio, and other Republican states were pushing for changes to ERIC’s membership agreement and bylaws, to lessen what states would be required to do to be members. This came from an underlying desire to no longer be required to reach out to eligible but unregistered voters, as ERIC’s current governing documents mandate.
The ERIC board, which consists of representatives from every member state, met Friday to consider changes that LaRose, among other Republicans, had been demanding in recent months. None of the proposed changes passed.
LaRose had signaled earlier this month that without such changes, he would pull Ohio out of ERIC. The state has been a member of the compact since 2016.
Six Republican states have now either pulled out or announced an intention to pull out — all since early 2022. None has elaborated on how they plan to keep their lists up to date without the trove of data they were receiving from the bipartisan partnership.
“It actually hurts that state more than it hurts us,” said Brad Raffensperger — the Republican secretary of state of Georgia, another state in ERIC — after Alabama announced it was leaving earlier this year. “They just indirectly said, ‘Oh, we’re going to have dirtier voter rolls over here.’ “