Kentuckians resist federal election overreach

How federal voting actions are testing Kentucky’s privacy, elections, and state authority

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Estimated time to read:

4–6 minutes

While attempts to push the SAVE Act through Congress are stalling in the Senate (for now), var­i­ous parts of the act are being pushed through oth­er means, and Kentucky is not immune to the effects.

During his sec­ond term, Trump has issued two exec­u­tive orders that deal with vot­ing. Though slight­ly dif­fer­ent in scope, both imple­ment sec­tions of the SAVE Act seek­ing to move pow­er over elec­tions away from the states and to the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment. And both seek to com­pile a fed­er­al vot­er reg­istry con­sist­ing of pri­vate infor­ma­tion, includ­ing license num­bers and par­tial or full social secu­ri­ty num­bers (see Part II for more details). 

Both of these exec­u­tive orders have been chal­lenged, and both were ruled uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, but are being appealed. More recent­ly, the Department of Justice has now sued 30 states (includ­ing Kentucky) in an effort to gain access to the vot­er rolls of cit­i­zens. While 10 of these suits have been dis­missed, the law­suit in Kentucky is still ongo­ing. These attempts by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment to inter­fere in Kentucky elec­tions should alarm us for three pri­ma­ry reasons. 

Kentucky’s elections are safe and secure 

As stat­ed pre­vi­ous­ly in Part I of this series, Kentucky law already requires a pho­to ID to vote. This law has been in place since 2020 despite no record­ed cas­es of vot­er fraud involv­ing cit­i­zen­ship or imper­son­ation in Kentucky. 

According to data com­piled by the Heritage Foundation (an ultra-right-wing think tank), there have been 62 court cas­es in Kentucky that involved vot­er fraud over the last 45 years. Based on perusal of the data­base, 58 of those cas­es involved buy­ing votes for local elec­tions. Three of the cas­es involved felons voting. 

However, none of those cas­es involve non-res­i­dent vot­ers or imper­son­at­ing vot­ers at the polls. There is no viable rea­son for the DOJ to demand unredact­ed vot­er rolls from the cit­i­zens of Kentucky. 

Kentucky fights for states’ rights 

As men­tioned in Part II of this series, the com­mon thread through­out all of these efforts is fed­er­al over­reach into the con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly pro­tect­ed right of states to con­duct their own elections. 

Even though the fight for states’ rights is usu­al­ly con­sid­ered to be a Republican val­ue, in a bipar­ti­san effort, Kentucky’s elect­ed offi­cials are fight­ing back against fed­er­al over­reach on sev­er­al fronts. While Democratic Governor Andy Beshear fights to keep sen­si­tive data about SNAP recip­i­ents from get­ting into gov­ern­ment hands, Republican Secretary of State Michael Adams is push­ing back against the DOJ’s law­suit demand­ing unredact­ed vot­er rolls. 

The bipar­ti­san Kentucky State Board of Elections has held firm in its refusal to pro­vide sen­si­tive infor­ma­tion while ful­fill­ing all oth­er requests from the DOJ, but that has not been enough to pla­cate the admin­is­tra­tion. (The KSBE has kept detailed records of the cor­re­spon­dence avail­able on its web­site.)

This push­back against the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment is not a new posi­tion for Kentuckians to take. 

Kentucky has a long and proud his­to­ry of fight­ing for the rights of the Commonwealth to make deci­sions about what is best for its cit­i­zens with­out the inter­fer­ence of the fed­er­al government. 

The Kentucky Resolutions were passed in 1798 — just 15 years after the war for inde­pen­dence end­ed. They were writ­ten by Thomas Jefferson and famous­ly argued that the states had the right to chal­lenge fed­er­al laws and declare them void in the case of fed­er­al overreach. 

In the Civil War, Kentucky ini­tial­ly draft­ed a state­ment of neu­tral­i­ty and main­tained its sep­a­ra­tion from both the Union and the Confederacy while pass­ing laws pro­hibit­ing its weapons and per­son­nel from being used to fur­ther either cause. When Kentuckians did enter into com­bat, each cit­i­zen did so accord­ing to his own per­son­al con­vic­tions and not under com­pul­sion from the fed­er­al government. 

Kentuckians are loyal to principles over party 

Kentuckians also have a his­to­ry of loy­al­ty to prin­ci­ples and ideals over polit­i­cal par­ty. At one time, Kentucky was con­sid­ered a “swing state” with a large num­ber of reg­is­tered Democrats. (In the ear­ly 90s, over half of the rep­re­sen­ta­tives elect­ed were Democrats). 

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However, over time, the state has become more red and is now con­sid­ered a Republican strong­hold. In 10 of the last 12 pres­i­den­tial elec­tions, Kentuckians elect­ed a Republican. However, more than half of reg­is­tered vot­ers are still reg­is­tered as Democrats or third-par­ty, and while the Kentucky Supreme Court con­cedes that the state is polit­i­cal­ly ger­ry­man­dered in favor of Republicans, in 10 of the last 12 guber­na­to­r­i­al elec­tions, Kentuckians have elect­ed a Democrat. 

This indi­cates that Kentucky cit­i­zens are will­ing to buck straight-par­ty vot­ing in order to vote for the can­di­date they think most embod­ies the val­ues of Kentuckians. And even when keep­ing with­in the Republican frame­work, we have often elect­ed anti-estab­lish­ment politi­cians like Rand Paul and Thomas Massie, who lean more independent/libertarian than Republican, and Henry Clay, who helped uni­fy Kentucky (and the United States) through the afore­men­tioned Civil War, earn­ing him the nick­name “The Great Compromiser.” 

Historically, Kentuckians have val­ued lib­er­ty. We have shown our­selves to be a peo­ple who aren’t afraid to stand up for our own rights and for the rights of those who don’t look, think, or vote like us — even if it means going against the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment or par­ty politics. 

There is no one por­trait of a “Kentuckian.” We are a com­mon­wealth of every race, every reli­gion, and every val­ue sys­tem. As Jesse Stuart, 1954 poet lau­re­ate of Kentucky, elo­quent­ly stated, 

Kentucky is nei­ther south­ern, north­ern, east­ern, nor west­ern, 
It is the core of America. 
If these United States could be called a body, 
Kentucky can be called its heart. 
And that heart beats for lib­er­ty and jus­tice — for all. 

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  • Crystal Brantly is a musician, artist, writer, and lifelong learner. She currently resides in Winchester with her husband, four kids, and dog, where she spends the majority of her days homeschooling her three younger kids and running them around to their many activities. She can usually be found, coffee in hand, researching whatever has caught her attention or teaching herself another skill needed to keep up with her kids’ interests. When she grows up, she wants to be someone who is able to speak truth to power while maintaining her own peace… and someone who builds giant displays out of LEGO.

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