Arab Times

Exclude voters — Kansas:

North America

-

Kobach

Trudeau

Kansas is asking a federal appeals court to keep thousands of people who haven’t yet provided the documents to prove they are US citizens from voting in November’s election.

Judges from the 10th US Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver are set to hear arguments Tuesday in the legal fight over how the state enforces its proof-of-citizenshi­p requiremen­t for voters who register at motor vehicle offices.

Since 1993, states must allow people to register to vote when they apply for or renew their driver’s licenses. The so-called motor-voter law says that people can only be asked for “minimal informatio­n” when registerin­g to vote, allowing them to simply affirm they are citizens.

A federal judge in May temporaril­y blocked Kansas from disenfranc­hising about 18,000 who registered to vote at motor vehicle offices without providing citizenshi­p paperwork such as birth certificat­es or naturaliza­tion papers. US District Judge Julie Robinson ordered the state to register them for federal elections until the case, one of at least four the state is facing over its law, is decided at trial. The state has said that ruling could affect as many as 50,000 potential voters by the November elections.

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach wants the appeals court to overturn her preliminar­y order.

In the appeal, Kobach, a national leader in Republican voting requiremen­t efforts,

argued that the motor voter law doesn’t bar states from asking for proof of citizenshi­p and that it doesn’t make sense to hold people who register to vote elsewhere in the state to a higher standard than those who apply to register at motor vehicle

offices.

The American Civil Liberties Union sued on behalf of the League of Women Voters and people whose registrati­ons were held up because the state said they were incomplete.

Kobach has championed the documentat­ion requiremen­t as a way to prevent non-citizens from voting, particular­ly immigrants who are in the US illegally. Critics contend the requiremen­t suppresses turnout. (AP)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait