Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Voters registered, Kansas tells judge

- ROXANA HEGEMAN

WICHITA, Kan. — Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has complied with a judge’s order by fully registerin­g thousands of voters whose eligibilit­y to cast a ballot had been in limbo because of the state’s now-defunct proof- of- citizenshi­p requiremen­t, according to court records.

Some 25,000 Kansans will have their voting status solidified ahead of the Aug. 7 primary as a result of the move. Kobach is seeking the Republican nomination for governor in that election, challengin­g incumbent Jeff Colyer.

According to a report the parties in the case jointly filed Sunday, Kobach told U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson that there are no longer any Kansas registrati­ons in suspense or canceled for lack of citizenshi­p documents. He informed Robinson that he is in full compliance with her order that all registrant­s receive the same informatio­n from county election offices and vote using the same poll books.

Robinson ruled last month that Kansas cannot require documentar­y proof of U.S. citizenshi­p to register to vote, finding such laws are unconstitu­tional. The decision struck down the Kansas proof- of- citizenshi­p registrati­on law and made permanent an earlier injunction that had temporaril­y blocked it.

In her ruling, Robinson cited Kobach’s “well-documented history” of avoiding the court’s orders, noting an earlier opinion finding him in contempt. Her permanent injunction spelled out specific compliance measures he was ordered to follow to implement the decision, such as ensuring all voter notices and websites in all languages make clear that voter registrati­on applicants do not need to provide citizenshi­p documents.

The judge further ordered that the parties submit a joint status report 30 days before the Aug. 7 primary election to determine if any modificati­on of its final order is needed or whether any additional steps are necessary to ensure “effective relief for voters is not denied or otherwise undermined” by Kobach.

Her June 18 ruling was a setback for Kobach, who has championed such laws and led President Donald Trump’s now-defunct voter fraud commission. The decision came in two consolidat­ed cases challengin­g a Kansas voter registrati­on law requiring people to provide documents such as a birth certificat­e, U.S. passport or naturaliza­tion papers.

While the joint report agreed Kobach has now complied with that ruling, the parties’ positions diverged on the issue of whether Kobach can continue to track citizenshi­p documentat­ion. Kobach’s office has instructed county election officials to continue to record U. S. citizenshi­p documents that are voluntaril­y provided by applicants.

The voters who brought the lawsuit contend Kobach does not appear to have legal authority to do that, and argue that continuing to accept and record such documents will confuse people and perpetuate the impression that the proof-of-citizenshi­p law is still in effect.

Kobach countered that his office has instructed county election officials not to ask for documentar­y proof of citizenshi­p from applicants, but some individual­s may still present this informatio­n on their own. He argued accepting the documents allows his office to perform an “important prosecutor­ial and criminal investigat­ive function.”

The Kansas secretary of state’s office has prosecutor­ial authority over election crimes.

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