As Victoria Marshall wrote in these pages, ERIC mandates that states engage in voter list maintenance "Only after [they have] independently validated" the data they receive from the organization.
ERIC's ties to Becker - who has since resigned from his role as a nonvoting ERIC board member - and its refusal to change its bylaws have prompted a flurry of GOP election officials to withdraw their states from the organization within the past two years.
Some of these jurisdictions, including Virginia, Ohio, and Alabama, have since formed separate interstate voter data-sharing pacts to serve as an ERIC replacement.
These "Zuckbucks" were then poured into local election offices throughout the country to push sloppy Democrat-backed voting policies, such as mass mail-in voting and the widespread use of ballot drop boxes.
Fifield then took things a step further by advancing the contrived narrative that Republican officials whose states left ERIC are having difficulty sharing voter data with other states and ensuring accuracy within their voter rolls.
Contrary to Fifield's activist "Reporting," several GOP secretaries of state whose jurisdictions have departed ERIC have publicly testified under oath that they haven't experienced any issues with managing their voter rolls since withdrawing from the organization.
In October, Secretaries of State Frank LaRose of Ohio and Cord Byrd of Florida spoke before a Pennsylvania Senate committee hearing about their respective experiences with ERIC and maintaining accurate voter registration lists since departing the program.
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