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House Democrat starts inquiry into GOP voter-registration consultant

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — The top Democrat on a House committee launched an inquiry Monday into a consulting firm under scrutiny for voter-registration irregularities, seeking details about its relationship with the Republican National Committee.

In a letter, Rep. Elijah E. Cummings of Maryland asked Nathan Sproul, who runs Strategic Allied Consulting, to make himself available for an interview by Oct. 12, and to provide copies of his correspondence with the RNC and state political parties. Cummings is the ranking Democrat on the Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

State officials in Florida are investigating voter registration activity by Strategic Allied, which was hired by the RNC this summer to do get-out-the-vote work in seven swing states.

The national party directed at least $3.1 million through state parties to Strategic Allied before severing ties with the company last week after election officials in Florida’s Palm Beach County discovered potentially fraudulent voter registration forms submitted by one of its workers. Since then, 10 other Florida counties have reported suspicious voter registration applications that trace back to the state Republican Party.

Officials in Colorado, Nevada and North Carolina are also investigating isolated reports of registration irregularities linked to Strategic Allied.

In a statement posted Monday on Strategic Allied’s website, the company said it “has never tolerated even minimal violations of election law when registering voters” while the firm and its affiliates registered about 500,000 voters in 40 states in the last eight years. “It would surprise me if there were no problems,” said Mark Leibowitz, a spokesman for Sproul.

“Inevitably, there have been accusations of ‘bad registrations,’ isolated instances that have been thoroughly investigated not only internally but by the appropriate legal authorities,” the firm said in its statement. “In every instance, our company and its affiliates have been cleared of any wrongdoing.”

Sproul, a former head of the Arizona Republican Party, said last week that, because of bad publicity from past investigations, the Republican National Committee requested that he set up a new firm to handle the work this year so the RNC would not be linked to the allegations. RNC spokesman Sean Spicer disputed that contention.

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