U.S. News
Ohio Gains Tools To Secure Voter Rolls
Clear Facts
- Ohio secured a long-term data sharing agreement with the Trump administration to improve voter roll accuracy.
- The agreement allows Ohio access to the federal SAVE database for at least 20 years.
- Secretary of State Frank LaRose praised the deal for supporting efforts to ensure only citizens are registered to vote.
Ohio now has an agreement with the Trump administration guaranteeing enhanced federal records access to maintain clean voter rolls for decades.
Secretary of State Frank LaRose announced this deal gives Ohio lasting access to the federal SAVE system, which was previously costly and limited.
“Ohio has a duty to ensure that only U.S. citizens are registered to vote, and this agreement gives us the tools to do that job right,” LaRose said.
The data agreement provides Ohio with the power to verify citizenship and conduct bulk verification requests efficiently.
The lawsuit with the Department of Homeland Security has concluded, ending the practice of charging per-query fees under the prior administration.
LaRose’s office has already removed tens of thousands of improper registrations since before the 2024 election and previously referred over 1,000 noncitizens to federal authorities for review.
Of 1,084 identified cases, 167 individuals were found to have voted in a federal election since 2018.
The office identified 99 double voters in two states, 16 people voting twice in Ohio, 14 votes cast after death, four suspected of ballot harvesting, and two with unlawful residence registrations.
Over 155,000 registrations deemed abandoned and inactive for at least four years were also purged.
LaRose praised the Trump administration’s role in delivering stable, long-term access to data needed for election integrity.
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