06/11/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/11/2026 17:05
Washington, D.C. - Oregon's U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley and California's U.S. Senator Alex Padilla reintroduced legislation to protect voters in the face of the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) and recent attacks on voting by the Trump Administration.
The Fraudulent Artificial Intelligence Regulations (FAIR) Elections Act bans false election-related AI-generated content intended to suppress voters and target election workers. Merkley and Padilla's updated bill also prohibits the federal government from deploying tools that could be used for voter suppression and allows voters to fight back against wrongful removals from voter rolls if they are erroneously removed due to the federal government's actions.
"The ballot box is the beating heart of democracy, and we must use every tool at our disposal to protect it," said Merkley. "In the face of bad actors abusing AI to spread disinformation about voting to further dangerous voter suppression efforts, the FAIR Elections Act will help take on this 21st-century threat and stand up to the Trump Administration's anti-democratic efforts to target eligible voters they don't like. I'm fighting to protect the right of every eligible voter to make their voice heard."
"The strength of our democracy relies on our elections being safe, secure, and accessible. As the use of AI spreads rapidly, we must ensure there are guardrails in place to prevent it from becoming a tool to suppress votes, spread disinformation, or purge eligible voters from the rolls," said Padilla. "The FAIR Elections Act is an important step to help us protect our elections and ensure voters aren't targeted by bad actors using AI to interfere with the right to vote."
The threats AI pose to our elections are no longer theoretical: bad actors use AI and other new digital tools to file mass voter challenges using questionably scraped public data, which disrupts election administration and threatens to disenfranchise thousands of voters.
Additionally, at the request of the Trump Administration at least 25 states have turned over their data rolls for the federal government to determine a voter's eligibility using the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) system at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS). This database is notably riddled with errors, and isn't intended to determine voter eligibility, which has resulted and will continue to result in eligible American voters having their voter registration status challenged, with many states deploying tactics to make it difficult for voters to stay on the rolls and have their vote counted.
The FAIR Elections Act would respond to these threats by:
Merkley and Padilla's FAIR Elections Act is cosponsored by U.S. Senators Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), and Peter Welch (D-VT).
Their bill is supported by Public Citizen, Common Cause, and Lawyers' Committee.
"The elections process is under attack, as some government officials are attempting to tamper with and purge from the voting rolls millions of American voters. The FAIR Elections Act, spearheaded by Sen. Merkley with scores of co-sponsors, would provide valuable protections to the voter rolls and the electoral process itself, ensuring our right to vote. The FAIR Elections Act is heartily endorsed by Public Citizen," said Craig Holman, Ph.D., Public Citizen.
"The FAIR Elections Act helps ensure our election laws keep pace with the realities of the digital age," said Common Cause's Senior Policy Director for Voting and Fair Representation Dan Vicuña. "Bad actors are increasingly using new technologies like AI to mislead voters while flawed data systems put eligible Americans at risk of being wrongly removed from the rolls. Congress must act to protect Americans' freedom to vote and ensure every eligible voter can participate without fear of deception, intimidation, or wrongful removal."
Full text of the bill can be found by clicking here.
A summary of the bill can be found by clicking here.
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