IE 11 Not Supported

For optimal browsing, we recommend Chrome, Firefox or Safari browsers.

Minnesota Lawmakers Address Privacy Concerns with New Bill

The issue is getting renewed attention from lawmakers in both parties as the state switches to a new presidential primary system for the first time in nearly 30 years. Critics have cited data privacy concerns.

US-NEWS-MINNESOTA-LAWMAKERS-AIM-TO-HALT-MS.jpg
A poll worker spoke with a voter as the Minneapolis Early Voting Center opened Jan. 17.
Glen Stubbe/Star Tribune/TNS
(TNS) — Several House Republicans are pushing a fast-track bill that would prevent Minnesota election officials from recording voters’ party preferences in the March 3 presidential primary and purge any data that’s already been collected, part of an effort to address growing privacy concerns over the state’s new primary election system.

In pushing the proposal, which will be introduced when the Legislature convenes on Feb. 11, some GOP lawmakers aim to stem new worries over a requirement for the state to collect data on which ballots voters request and send that information to the chairs of all four major parties in the state. There are no specifications in law about what the party chairs should — or shouldn’t — do with that data.

The issue is getting renewed attention from lawmakers in both parties as Minnesota switches to a presidential primary system for the first time in nearly 30 years. DFL leaders also have offered a plan to limit how the voter data is used, but some leading Minnesota Republicans have warned that any late changes could upend the state’s role in the two parties’ nominating process.

Early voting in the primary kicked off on Jan. 17 and thousands of Minnesotans already have cast their ballots. But Republican Rep. Peggy Scott, R-Andover, said she’s heard from voters who might not participate at all because they don’t want to disclose their party preference.

“In Minnesota we have a history of protecting people’s private information, and this instance should be no different,” she said in a news conference Wednesday. “Your vote is your business.”

Scott, along with Rep. Pat Garofalo, R-Farmington, rolled out a plan Wednesday to block the collection of voters’ party preferences.

Lawmakers switched to the primary in 2016 after high turnout bogged down the party-run caucus system with long lines and confusing rules that frustrated voters. The original bill would have made voters’ party preferences public information, but lawmakers struck a deal last spring to limit the data all four major party chairs, including the DFL, the Republican Party of Minnesota and two pro-marijauna parties.

Critics argue the new primary is a backdoor to party registration, a system used in 31 other states and the District of Columbia where voters pick a party affiliation when they register to vote. In a state where that information has long been considered private, some are worried their party affiliation could be leaked by the parties and jeopardize their jobs or personal relationships.

DFL Party Chairman Ken Martin supports limiting who can get the data, but he said national party rules require him to submit the names of those who participated in the primary to ensure there was no “widespread partisan interference” in the election.

“It is entirely possible to both protect the privacy of Minnesotans and allow our parties to defend the integrity of our presidential primary,” he said in a statement.

Martin is working with Secretary of State Steve Simon on a proposal that would only allow the data to go to a national party designee and limiting its use.

In a statement, Simon said he’s releasing a bill next week that will “will balance both the need for voter privacy and the national parties’ apparent requirements.”

But any proposal face an uphill battle this session with the primary already underway and opposition from key players.

Republican Party Chairwoman Jennifer Carnahan doesn’t support going back on a deal recently struck by the parties. Republican Sen. Mary Kiffmeyer, who chairs the Government Finance and Policy and Elections Finance Committee, said she’s concerned about not satisfying national party requirements and jeopardizing the state’s role in the nominating contest.

“The national political parties have said they will not seat the Minnesota delegates to nominate their candidates,” she said in a statement. “We shouldn’t put our voice in the nominating process at risk this late in the game.”

©2020 the Star Tribune Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.