List of 59 Iowa #NOKINGS Events For March 28 2026

Find your town on this list then go to mobilize.us/nokings/ to RSVP for location information and time.  Some events aren’t listed. If you don’t see your town here check with your local Dems to find out if there is a NoKings event in your community. 

IOWA NOKINGS#3 EVENTS

ALGONA

AMANA

AMES

ANKENY

ATLANTIC

BOONE

BURLINGTON/WEST BURLINGTON

CARROLL

CEDAR RAPIDS

CHARITON

CHARLES CITY

CLARINDA

CLINTON

COUNCIL BLUFFS

CRESTON

DAVENPORT

DECORAH

DES MOINES

DEWITT

DUBUQUE

FAIRFIELD

FORT DODGE

GLENWOOD

GRINNELL

HUMBOLDT

INDEPENDENCE

INDIANOLA

IOWA CITY

KEOKUK

KEOSAUQUA

LAMONI

MANCHESTER

MAQUOKETA

MASON CITY

MOUNT VERNON

NEWTON

NORTH LIBERTY

NORWALK

ONAWA

OSAGE

OSCEOLA

OSKALOOSA

OTTUMWA

PERRY

RED OAK

SAC CITY

SHENANDOAH

SIDNEY

SIOUX CENTER

SOUTH SIOUX CITY/SIOUX CITY

SPENCER

SPIRIT LAKE

STORM LAKE

TIPTON

VINTON

WASHINGTON

WATERLOO

WAVERLY

WEST BRANCH

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Christian Nationalists Are Coming For Your Public School


The White Christian Nationalist Network That Is Trying To Dominate Public Education

by Daniel Henderson

Follow Daniel Henderson on Substack where you can read the entire article. Here is a brief excerpt.

In my last post, Critical Thinking Citizens Or MAGA Loyalists?, I compared Russia’s school program of direct propaganda in trying to create support for their war on Ukraine and loyalists to Putin to the push in the United States for “patriotic education” in the nation’s schools.

In that prior post, I argued that “patriotic education” runs counter to the real purpose of having an educated citizenry. Citizens in a democracy need critical thinking abilities and the ability to question myths of US history and discern true information from misinformation.

This post will go into much more detail about this effort in the United States, which is clearly a white Christian nationalist project. My own experience teaching in private Christian schools allows me to understand what is at stake and the goals of this movement. I’ll explain the who, what, and how of this propagandistic, false-education movement.

Public Schools Are Ground Zero In The Culture Wars

I believe the public school system is ground zero in the tug-of-war over our culture. White Christian nationalists are no longer content to have the freedom to open their own private Christian schools and teach whatever amount of myth and misinformation they want. Because of the Seven Mountain Mandate, these folks believe God calls them to take control over all institutions of society, especially public schools.

I know exactly where this is headed.”

more on Substack.

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How Will Trump And Friends Be Held Accountable?

If you don’t have time to watch, you can always listen on your phone while you are working out or planting your garden or baking cookies or whatever you do.

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner joins Marc Elias to break down why the rule of law is hanging by a thread. They also discuss the Epstein files cover-up, DOJ ethics violations, and why we need a scorched-earth accountability effort.

Support Democracy Docket’s mission: https://newsletters.democracydocket.c…
00:00 Today’s Guest: Glenn Kirschner
00:41  One Year In: How is the Nation and the Rule of Law Doing?
02:47  Does the New “Accountability Project” Look Like?
05:43  Where Will the Next Generation of Non-Political Prosecutors Come From?
07:40  Context: Glenn’s History with Eric Holder and Bob Mueller
09:42 Unpacking Legal Standards: Probable Cause vs. Likelihood of Conviction
11:06 Case Study: The Sean Dunn “Sandwich Throwing” Prosecution
17:58
Accountability After Jan 6th: What Was Done Right and Wrong?
23:56 Avoiding the “Normalizing” of Political Crimes in 2029
26:19 Current Events: The Seizure of Ballots in Fulton County
28:15 Discussion: The “Presumption of Regularity” in Trump-era Courts
35:02 Is the Supreme Court Recalibrating on Executive Power?
37:21 Potential DOJ Interference in the Upcoming Election
40:13 The Epstein Files: What is Happening with the Missing Records?
47:44 Final Thoughts: What Can Everyday Americans Do to Fight Back?

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Clean Water Is Common Sense

Chris Jones


From our inbox:  A message from Democratic candidate for Iowa Secretary of Agriculture, Chris Jones. Check out his campaign website

Do you remember a cleaner Iowa?

I imagine a day when a miracle has happened.

On that day our streams run clear, our air smells of nature and not the moldered waste of a swine legion. Children play in our lakes while parents look on unconcerned about infection. From our faucet flows water we can know is safe to drink.

The work of prosperous farmers enhances the quality of life for all and not just a tiny fraction. Iowa remains a working landscape but one that fosters the well-being of native plants and animals, which have returned in abundance to co-mingle with a crop and livestock production system designed for human nutrition and environmental outcomes. The commerce from this system has rekindled rural life and reversed the migration of young people to big cities and distant states.

Many say these are impossible goals—the world has changed too much. Why do we let those that benefit most from the status quo define what is and isn’t possible? Shouldn’t we the people define the possible?   –  Chris Jones

Dear Friend of Clean Water,

It’s official — my name, Chris Jones, — will appear on the Iowa ballot this November as the Democratic candidate for the Iowa Secretary of Agriculture and Land Stewardship. Last month I submitted more than 5,638 ballot signatures from Iowans fed up with the status quo on Iowa’s water quality and Mike Naig’s failure to improve it.

Although I’m appreciative of this support, I’m still coming to grips with it because this is an endeavor I never thought I’d pursue. But after 3 years of retirement, I realized I couldn’t sit on the sidelines while my fellow Iowans are clamoring for clean lakes and safe drinking water.

After more than 40 years working on water quality issues, and much of that time spent studying the drivers of degredation, I hoped that I would spend my retirement years reading, writing, and fishing in the rivers and streams of Iowa as I have done across the state since childhood.

But then fate and the suggestion of a few good friends intervened—friends who share my view that we are at a water quality crisis point.

Why I’m running:

Iowa is a proud agricultural state. It boasts some of the most fertile soil on the planet and some of most the productive and innovative farmers in America.

The problem is that for the past 30 years Iowa’s politicians and Big Ag lobbyists have intentionally pushed for fencerow to fencerow 2-crop farming and the creation of huge livestock warehouses producing mountains of manure and waste— while abandoning reasonable and common-sense regulations of water pollution in our state’s waterways.

For me, and a growing number of Iowans, our state’s polluted water is no longer acceptable.

  1. Iowa is not only is #1 in corn producing state, #1 in factory farm hogs, eggs, and ethanol, but we also have a major problem with polluted rivers and streams.
  2. Our state produces so much animl waste that Iowa has become #1 in #2 if you know what I mean.
  3. As a result, Iowa has over 723 impaired waterways across the state.
  4. Last year, scientists found that pollutants like nitrates have doubled in the past 50 years in the Des Moines and Raccoon rivers.
  5. Sadly, the Des Moines and Raccoon rivers are the main sources of drinking water for more than 600,000 central Iowa residents.
  6. Agricultural runoff contributes more than 80% of the nitrates in the Des Moines and Raccoon river.
  7. The nitrate levels found in the state’s drinking water sources are above the federal government’s nitrate limit for safe drinking water.
  8. In the past 12 years, Iowans have spent over $5.6 billion dollars on alleged conservation practices to improve Iowa’s water quality, but the problem has only gotten worse!

This is an outrage — and the status quo isn’t working. If you want someone in elected office in Iowa to finally take water quality seriously – please consider donating to my campaign. Every dollar counts!

If this weren’t bad enough:

Iowa has 2nd Highest Rates of Cancer in the U.S.

  • In 2023, the Iowa Cancer Registry announced that Iowa has the 2nd highest rates of cancer in the U.S.
  • The Iowa Cancer Registry annual reports that find that 2 in 5 Iowans will be diagnosed with cancer in their lifetimes.
  • This year, an estimated 21,700 Iowans will be diagnosed with cancer, and roughly 6,400 Iowans will die from the disease.
  • About a million Iowans drink water that contains nitrate levels above a level (3 ppm) associated with a whole host of cancers, including colorectal, ovarian, thyroid, stomach and bladder, and pediatric cancer.
  • Iowa has 1% of the U.S. population, but 14% of the U.S. population drinking high nitrate water.

Iowa’s water quality is a serious and growing problem, and voters across the political spectrum agree it must be addressed. After more than a decade, the voluntary Nutrient Reduction Strategy, aministered by incumbent Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig, has failed to produce meaningful results. Meanwhile, our waterways remain polluted, and communities are paying the price.

My qualifications:

  • I spent 10 years managing a commercial environmental testing laboratory.
  • 5 years consulting for water and wastewater utilities.
  • 8 years running the testing laboratory at the Des Moines Water Works.
  • 4 years working as an environmental scientist at the Iowa Soybean Association.
  • And the last 8 years as a research scientist in the College of Engineering at the University of Iowa, where I studied contaminant hydrology in agricultural landscapes.

In 2023, I published a chronicle of some of my observations about clean water or the lack thereof in Iowa, called The Swine Republic: Struggles With the Truth About Agriculture and Water Quality.

Writing this book helped me realize the extent to which for the past 30 years Iowa’s public officials have been effectively silenced about the water crisis that Iowans are facing and it’s time to do something about it.

This is going to be an expensive race. Big Ag and Mike Naig’s former employers at Monsanto, now owned by the German pharmaceutical company Bayer, and all other ungovernable multinational agribusiness corporations, will not sit idly by.

Will you chip in $5, $10, or $25 to help elect me, Chris Jones as the next Iowa Secretary of Agriculture? With your support We can defeat Big Ag’s polluting agenda and help send Monsanto Mike back to the lobbying world where he belongs.

Iowans deserve honest data about water pollution and safe rivers and lakes, not partisan politics.

Sincerely,

Chris Jones

Candidate for Iowa Secretary of Agriculture

Clean water is not partisan. It’s common sense. Elect Chris Jones to be Iowa’s next Secretary of Agriculture and Land Stewardship so he can make clean water a priority from day one!


Paid for by Chris Jones for Iowa Secretary of Agriculture

 

Follow Chris Jones on social media:
facebook.com/chrisjones4ia
instagram.com/chrisjones4ia
tiktok.com/@chrisjones4ia

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Meet Vincent Collis Candidate For HD 61

Iowa House District 61

Vincent Collis is a Democrat running for HD 61.  The seat is currently held by Democrat Timi Brown-Powers who is running for election to the Iowa State Senate to represent District 31.

He is focused on three urgent priorities: keeping rural hospitals open, standing with family farmers to protect Iowa’s water, and fully funding public schools.

“Honest leadership means telling you the truth about what’s happening to our schools, our water, and our healthcare – and then doing something about it. I’m committed to fighting for the families of District 61. That’s my promise to you.”  – Vincent Collis

Follow Vincent Collis on Facebook  and Twitter  Check out his campaign website at vincentcollis.com

Follow Insufferable Wenches of Iowa YouTube channel for more statehouse candidate interviews. Insufferable Wenches is a progressive volunteer organization dedicated to civics education & engagement, mutual aid, advocacy, and all things political.”

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Keeping Up On The Climate Crisis

Pre-dawn hour on Lake Macbride, March 19, 2026.

Good people are working to address the climate crisis… just not in the Trump administration. The dominance of the president and his minions runs throughout the federal government to promote energy solutions that make climate change worse. More specifically, discussion about loosening the regulatory environment blocks needed conversations about addressing the climate crisis.

Since January 2025, the Congress held hearings that mention climate change. However, they hear mostly from industry representatives. Which industries? Groups like the American Petroleum Institute and U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Industry is urging Congress to create a more predictable, streamlined regulatory environment, emphasizing faster permitting, lower compliance costs, and clearer rules. They argue current regulations hinder investment, energy development, and competitiveness. They often frame climate policy in economic and security terms rather than scientific urgency. They do not address climate change, nor will they.

Few people I know don’t see the urgency of addressing the climate crisis.

Absent action by our federal government, there are voices we should recognize, beginning with Dr. Katharine Hayhoe, an atmospheric scientist. Global warming exists and Hayhoe doesn’t accept it on faith. According to her website, she crunches data, analyzes models, and helps engineers and city managers and ecologists quantify the impacts. She is everywhere on social media and tells the scientific truth about where our priorities should be.

Another person to follow is Bill McKibben, a prominent American environmentalist, author, and co-founder of the grassroots climate campaign 350.org. He is also founder of Third Act, which organizes people over the age of 60 for action on climate and justice, according to his website.

There are others, yet Hayhoe and McKibben are in the middle of what is currently happening regarding the climate crisis. Follow them.

Blog for Iowa also recommends the handy climate change BS guide I first posted in 2015, “Is That Climate Change Article BS?” It’s a bit dated, yet still has good advice:

  • Skip climate articles by people who think the problem is hopeless or intractable — because it most certainly is not.
  • Skip articles written by George Will and his ilk.
  • Skip articles — especially longer climate essays — by authors who don’t explicitly tell you what temperature target or CO2 concentration target they embrace and how they’d go about attaining it.
  • Skip articles embracing Orwellian terms like “good Anthropocene.”

“One of the most important things we all need to know when it comes to climate action is this: we are not alone.,” Katharine Hayhoe recently said. I invite readers to follow Hayhoe and McKibben on social media if you are not already.

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Nanny State — County Supervisor Edition

Governor Kim Reynolds signed into law Senate File 75 on April 11, 2025. Photo provenance unknown.

When Governor Kim Reynolds signed Senate File 75 into law on April 1, 2025, a crowd of Republican well-wishers was present.

Senate File 75 mandates that Iowa counties containing a Board of Regents university — specifically Johnson, Story, and Black Hawk — change their county supervisor elections from an at-large to a district-based system. The law has gone into effect and we are working through the new process.

Those at the signing ceremony included one Phil Hemingway who ran repeatedly and unsuccessfully for supervisor in Johnson County where I live. Hemingway backed this legislation. This week he filed for election to the Johnson County board of supervisors again, this time in newly created District 2. His is the bellwether race to see if Republican ideas on this prevail. Can they win a seat on the now all-Democratic board?

“Important to me personally was the passage of the county supervisor election reform bill,” Republican State Senator Dawn Driscoll said, “which protects the voices of our full-time residents in counties with large student populations.”

Driscoll’s colleague Republican State Representative Judd Lawler was not far behind.

“This legislation will improve local representation and accountability at the county level,” he said. “By using districts in these counties, the law promotes a more fair representation structure. This is particularly important in areas with highly transient populations, as it allows for better representation of all county residents, particularly rural and small-town residents.”

Driscoll and Lawler both represent parts of Johnson County.

Opponents, including local officials, argued the law targets specific areas and violates county home rule principles. A lawsuit filed in late 2025 challenged the law’s constitutionality, claiming it violates equal protection.

Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing that the law does not impede any voter rights and that the state has a legitimate regulatory interest in differentiating counties that host a regents-led university. The court rejected the motion.

“While the matter may be appropriate for disposition on summary judgment, the Court is not persuaded that it is the exceptional type of case that is appropriate for dismissal at the pre-answer stage of litigation. Therefore, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss should be denied,” the ruling states.

The district court also denied the motion for a temporary injunction which would have immediately blocked the law from going into effect. A non-jury trial is set to begin on March 3, 2027, long after the first election under the new process.

The horse seems out of the proverbial barn.

Even if plaintiffs win the case at trial, what happens next? That will be up to the judge. My Kentucky windage best shot is the new law is here to stay because if they were inclined to stop it, the court would have granted the injunction.

In the meanwhile, my small group of Democrats is organizing a get to know the supervisor candidate event in the new District 2, on March 28, at 1 p.m. at the Solon Public Library. The winner of the June 2, primary will presumably face Hemingway during the November general election.

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Miller-Meeks: Hands Off The ACA!

Action alert from Progress Iowa:

March 23rd, 2026, marks the anniversary of the signing of the Affordable Care Act, a historic law that expanded health care access for millions of Americans and helped countless individuals gain the health care coverage they desperately needed.

But instead of building on the foundation of the ACA, Republicans in Congress have, at every turn, tried to dismantle it. On the anniversary of the Affordable Care Act, join patients, healthcare providers, and healthcare advocates to demand: Hands off our healthcare.

Where: Meet outside 201 W 2nd St, Davenport

When: Monday, March 23, 2026, at NOON

Bring signs and join us to rally outside Representative Miller-Meeks Davenport office to say HANDS OFF THE ACA!  

Can’t attend – we understand. You can still help:

  • SIGN THE PETITION
  • Forward this email to others in your network who might be interested

When you sign, please let us know why you want to protect the ACA and EPTCs (Enhanced Premium Tax Credits). Your story matters.

In Solidarity,
Amy Adams
Partnerships Director, Progress Iowa

P.S. Know someone affected by the expiration of these tax credits? Forward this email and ask them to add their name. The more voices we have, the harder it is for Congress to ignore us.

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Save The Iowa Nitrate Water Sensor Network


Action Alert from Iowa Alliance for Responsible Agriculture (IARA)

Water Quality Sensor Pre-Call In Lobby Day Briefing
Mar 30, 2026 07:00 PM in
Organized by the Iowa Alliance for Responsible Agriculture (IARA)

With presentations by:

John Norris
Former Polk County Administrator

Dr. Adam Shriver
Director of Wellness and Nutrition, The Harkin Institute

Iowa’s real-time nitrate water sensor network is in danger of going dark on July 1, but funding is available through the Groundwater Protection Fund. Iowa legislators CAN allocate funding during this legislative session – but we’re going to have to fight hard for it.

Join us on March 30 to get the info you need then let’s take to the phones on April 1 to advocate for restored water quality monitoring!

At this March 30 briefing, John Norris and Dr. Adam Shriver will share the scientific findings of Central Iowa Source Water Research Assessment (CISWRA) Report, “Currents of Change,” released this summer. This is the most comprehensive, scientifically based water report ever conducted in the Des Moines and Raccoon River watershed.

Its findings: agriculture accounts for nearly 80% of the nitrate pollution in those two rivers.

The meeting will present the science behind the findings as well as discuss policies needed to adequately address our water pollution crisis and the politics involved in getting such policies adopted.

*** A special focus will be on the restored funding and expansion of the University of Iowa IIHR real-time nitrate sensors that many rural municipal water systems depend on for high nitrate warnings to keep Iowans safe. ***

IARA will prepare you with talking points for our Water Quality Sensor Call-in Lobby Day. We’ll make lobbying easy, and we’ll have time to answer your questions.

Iowa is #2 in the nation for cancer and is the only state with a growing number of cancer cases. Studies link drinking water with high nitrate levels to certain cancers. Iowans deserve to know what’s in our water.

Join us on March 30 to get the info you need then let’s take to the phones on April 1 to advocate for restored water quality monitoring!

Our mailing address is:
info@iowaresponsibleagriculture.org

The Iowa Alliance for Responsible Agriculture (IARA) is a coalition of community, state, and national organizations calling for a factory farm moratorium until there are less than 100 water impairments. Learn more at IowaResponsibleAgriculture.org.

Your donations help keep us going. If you like what we’re doing, please consider making a tax-deductible donation today. Thank you for your support!

Iowa Alliance for Responsible Agriculture

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Trump Data Grab Will Likely Motivate Voters

In bid for voter data, Trump’s DOJ lays groundwork to undermine confidence in midterms

by Jonathan Shorman, Iowa Capital Dispatch
March 17, 2026

The U.S. Department of Justice has begun connecting its push to obtain sensitive personal data on millions of voters to whether the upcoming midterm elections will be fair and secure, laying the groundwork for the Trump administration to potentially cast doubt on the results.

The Justice Department has sued 29 states and the District of Columbia over their refusal to provide unredacted voter rolls that include the driver’s license and partial Social Security numbers of voters. The department has lost three of those lawsuits so far this year.

But as the Justice Department begins appealing the losses, it has filed emergency motions warning the “security and sanctity of elections” would be questioned in those states — California, Michigan and Oregon — without immediate rulings.

Election experts told Stateline that federal appellate courts are unlikely to move quickly for the Justice Department. Instead, the department’s court filings suggest that without the data, the Trump administration may question the validity of the midterm elections in November.

“Absent a final Court determination on this matter there is no other process to ensure a fair election in 2026,” the Trump administration’s motions say.

President Donald Trump has made identifying noncitizen voting, an extremely rare occurrence, a priority of his administration, and the Justice Department has said the detailed personal data is necessary to ensure states are properly maintaining their voter rolls. At least a dozen Republican-led states have provided the information.

Democratic election officials, and some Republicans, have condemned the demands as an invasion of voters’ privacy and have voiced concerns the Trump administration plans to use the information to target political opponents or create a national voter list. Other Republican election officials and the Trump administration and have downplayed privacy concerns and said the data will help ensure only eligible voters cast ballots.

The DOJ’s sense of urgency comes after the department spent months sending letters to state officials demanding voter data, followed by successive rounds of lawsuits against states that refused to comply — all in what department officials said was the pursuit of noncitizen voters.

“We know this isn’t a big problem nationwide,” said David Becker, executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research and a former senior trial attorney in the Justice Department’s Voting Section during the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations.

“We know the states have adequate safeguards,” Becker said. “We see Republicans — Republicans — coming out and saying this repeatedly. So there is no problem that urgently needs to be solved in advance of the election.”

But the Trump administration has increased its attention on elections in recent weeks. In early February, Trump voiced a desire to “nationalize” elections. He demanded Congress pass a proof of citizenship voter registration requirement and strict voter ID rules. The U.S. Senate is expected to debate the bill next week, but it is unlikely to have enough votes to advance.

The FBI has also seized ballots from the 2020 election in Fulton County, Georgia, and the Arizona Senate complied with a federal grand jury subpoena for records related to its 2020 audit of that year’s election results in Maricopa County, Arizona.

Michigan responded to the Justice Department in a March 6 court filing by asserting that its case involves no emergency. Lawyers representing Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, wrote that the appeal doesn’t challenge any state election law or rule and that the outcome of the case would have little to no effect on the 2026 election.

In response to an interview request, Benson’s office referred Stateline to a news release that quoted the secretary as urging election officials across the country “to stand up to the federal government’s overreach and to safeguard citizens’ private voting information we’ve been entrusted to protect.”

Oregon Democratic Secretary of State Tobias Read said in an emailed statement to Stateline that he’s “confident in our case, and trust the courts will continue to uphold the Constitution and the privacy rights of all Oregonians.”

California Democratic Secretary of State Shirley Weber didn’t respond to an interview request.

Federal judges have so far ruled that even though states must perform maintenance on their voter rolls, federal law doesn’t give the Justice Department authority to obtain full voter lists.

While the Justice Department now claims the security and sanctity of upcoming elections necessitates the need for speed, the department hasn’t alleged any states are violating federal voter list maintenance requirements, said Derek Clinger, senior counsel and director of partnerships at the State Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Law School.

“This is the first time in all the litigation that DOJ has claimed that there’s an urgent need to resolve the cases,” said Clinger, who is tracking the voter data lawsuits.

This is the first time in all the litigation that DOJ has claimed that there’s an urgent need to resolve the cases.

– Derek Clinger, State Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Law School

Even if courts ultimately determine that states must provide the voter data, it’s not clear that the Justice Department could make effective use of it before the midterms.

Federal law generally prohibits states from conducting significant purges of registered voters less than 90 days before primary and general elections. For example, that period will begin in Michigan on May 6 ahead of the state’s Aug. 4 primary election.

The Justice Department has asked for all court documents in its Michigan appeal to be filed by April 1. Even if the appellate court immediately ruled in the department’s favor, only 35 days would be left until the pre-primary blackout period.

Lawyers for Michigan wrote in its court filing that it is “dubious” that any serious assessment of the state’s 7.3 million voters could occur in that time frame.

Still, Rosario Palacios, a naturalized U.S. citizen who leads the good-government group Common Cause Georgia, said she’s worried the federal government could wrongly flag her or others like her as noncitizens if the Justice Department eventually obtains her state’s unredacted voter roll.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security operates a powerful online program called SAVE (Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements) that it uses to verify citizenship. It has previously invited states to run their voter rolls through the program, and the Trump administration in September confirmed the Justice Department is sharing state voter roll data with Homeland Security. But SAVE has faced criticism from some election officials for mistakenly flagging U.S. citizens for review.

After the department sued Georgia for refusing to turn over its data, Palacios and Common Cause intervened in the lawsuit to oppose the demand.

Palacios said in an interview she’s worried some may choose not to participate in the election. “The fear alone of this is going to make people withdraw.”

Some GOP states share voter data

The Justice Department has offered few details about how it intends to analyze the voter data it obtains. The agency didn’t answer questions from Stateline and declined to comment.

Idaho Republican Secretary of State Phil McGrane last month said he wouldn’t turn over voter data. McGrane declined an interview request, but in a Feb. 26 letter to the Justice Department he raised concerns about data security.

“While I appreciate the Department’s representations that Idaho’s data will be safeguarded, I cannot take that now-apparent risk in the absence of clear legal duty to do so,” McGrane wrote.

Some Republican election officials have decided to share their state’s data, however.

Eric Neff, the acting chief of the Justice Department’s Voting Section, wrote in a March 2 court filing that 18 states had either shared voter data or planned to do so soon. He didn’t name those states.

The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University, which tracks the voter data requests, has identified at least a dozen states that have provided the data: Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming.

Two of those states — Alaska and Texas — provided their voter rolls after signing a memorandum of understanding, or MOU, with the Justice Department.

The document, marked confidential, says that after the state provides its voter roll, the department agrees to test, analyze and assess the information. Each state agrees to “clean” its voter roll within 45 days by removing any ineligible voters. States would then resubmit their list.

Tennessee Elections Coordinator Mark Goins, who works under Tennessee Republican Secretary of State Tre Hargett, said in an interview that the state had shared its voter data after concluding that DOJ was entitled to it as part of its authority to enforce federal voting law. But Goins said Tennessee had decided against signing the memorandum of understanding because of concerns that the agreement conflicted with the National Voter Registration Act, which sets rules on when election officials can remove voters from their lists.

“When you’re dealing with this much data, and we have 4 million registered voters here, there could be a false flag and you certainly don’t remove anyone improperly,” Goins said.

In Texas, it’s unclear when the Justice Department will provide feedback on the state’s voter list. The state is currently in the preelection blackout period on sweeping changes to its voter registration list ahead of a May 26 primary runoff election, a spokesperson for Texas Republican Secretary of State Jane Nelson told Stateline.

Texas already ran its voter roll of more than 18 million voters through Homeland Security’s SAVE program last year, identifying 2,724 potential noncitizens registered to vote. County election officials were then left to investigate the flagged voters.

Christopher McGinn, executive director of the Texas Association of County Election Officials, said he’s unsure what would happen now, given that the state’s voter roll was recently examined by SAVE.

“Especially since those noncitizens were, in theory, cleaned up,” McGinn said.

In Alaska, the decision to share voter data has produced blowback from some state lawmakers. The state constitution guarantees a right to privacy that “shall not be infringed.”

Alaska Director of Elections Carol Beecher faced skeptical lawmakers during hearings last week that probed her refusal to waive attorney-client privilege to divulge the legal advice she received before providing the voter roll. In response to questions from Stateline, Beecher’s office referred back to her remarks to lawmakers.

“At this point, I am not willing to waive that privilege,” Beecher said at an Alaska Senate hearing.

Alaska state Sen. Bill Wielechowski, a Democrat who was among those who questioned Beecher, in an interview predicted the state will soon face lawsuits challenging the data sharing. He also said lawmakers are looking into pursuing legislation that would direct state officials to seek the return of the information from the Justice Department.

“I just think there’s a total lack of trust in what the federal government will do with this information,” Wielechowski said.

Stateline reporter Jonathan Shorman can be reached at jshorman@stateline.org.

This story was originally produced by Stateline, which is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network which includes Iowa Capital Dispatch, and is supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity.

Iowa Capital Dispatch is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapitaldispatch.com.

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