ALBANY, NY — Personal information about all New York voters will be released to President Donald Trump's controversial "election integrity" commission, the state Board of Elections announced Wednesday, despite promises from New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo that the state would withhold its voter database from the feds.

"We will comply," a spokesman for the Board of Elections told Patch. "The data will be sent out this afternoon."

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Back in late June, after Trump's commission requested voter info from all 50 states, Gov. Cuomo said: "New York refuses to perpetuate the myth voter fraud played a role in our election. We will not be complying with this request, and I encourage the Election Commission to work on issues of vital importance to voters, including ballot access, rather than focus on debunked theories of voter fraud." However, each state's decision on whether to share its voter info with the feds — or with anyone else — is ultimately not up to the governor's office. It's up to the board of elections. And Wednesday, New York's board made the choice to comply.

Gov. Cuomo's office did not respond to a request for comment. UPDATE: In a statement sent out Wednesday evening, Cuomo clarified that when he said New York wouldn't hand over its voter rolls back in June, he was responding to the Trump commission's original request, which demanded "sensitive personal data" like criminal histories and Social Security numbers. Since then, Cuomo said, the commission's Freedom of Information Law request has been revised to demand only "publicly available information" about voters — including their names, ages, addresses, political affiliations and voting histories. (Scroll down for more details.) "Our position remains unchanged," Cuomo said Wednesday, "and we will continue to deny requests for sensitive personal data about New York residents, which is protected under the law. We will never provide private voter information to anyone, especially a politically-motivated organization seeking to perpetuate the myth of voter fraud."

NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio, for his part, still doesn't think it was a good idea to hand over the database in any form.

.@POTUS' "Voter Integrity Commission" is thinly-veiled voter suppression. The State Board of Elections should not cooperate with this sham. https://t.co/NfXnnfYyhm

— Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) August 2, 2017 What The Data Dump Means For You Social security numbers and driver's license numbers will not be included in the dump, according to John Conklin, spokesman for the New York State Board of Elections. But voters' names, ages, addresses, political parties, voting histories and various other details will still be in there.

Here's a sample layout of the files New York will be handing over. In short: As of this afternoon, personal details about you and your political views — along with those of nearly 13 million other New York voters — will be sitting on a computer in the White House, waiting to be tapped into at the U.S. government's discretion.