The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ruling eases voting for new citizens

Judge says they can cast ballots with proof of citizenshi­p at polls.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

A federal judge ordered Georgia election officials to end the “severe burden” facing some new U.S. citizens trying to vote for the first time, deciding Friday that they must be allowed to cast regular ballots if they show proof of citizenshi­p at the polls.

U.S. District Judge Eleanor Ross ruled against Secretary of State Brian Kemp, the Republican candidate for governor who faces Democrat Stacey Abrams in Tuesday’s election. Kemp, who oversees Georgia’s elections, had argued that state law already provides a process for new citizens to vote.

Ross wrote in her order that the state’s process wasn’t working because some new citizens who signed up to register to vote have been turned away at early-voting locations.

Her injunction, coming just four days before Election Day, orders that anyone whose voter

registrati­on has been put on hold because of his or her citizenshi­p status can vote on a regular ballot after show- ing proof to a poll manager or deputy registrar. Previously, only deputy registrars could verify citizenshi­p, and they weren’t always available when voters tried to cast their ballots.

“Allowing poll managers to verify proof of citizenshi­p would alleviate the severe burden on individual­s who have been flagged and placed in pending status for citizen- ship while still serving the state’s interest of ensuring that only United States’ citi- zens are voting,” Ross wrote.

The ruling could affect more than 3,000 people whose registrati­ons have been placed on hold because their citizenshi­p couldn’t be verified by state driver’s license records. Noncitizen­s who establish residency in Georgia can obtain driver’s licenses, but those records often aren’t updated when they become citizens, lead- ing to their voting registra- tions being flagged until they show naturaliza­tion papers or a U.S. passport.

Kemp’s office minimized the impact of Ross’ order, saying she modified the state’s existing process for check- ing citizenshi­p at the polls.

“She decided to allow poll managers to participat­e in the verificati­on process,” said Candice Broce, a spokes- woman for Kemp. “It is a minor change to the current system.”

Voting rights groups who had sued Kemp said the court order protects the ability of new citizens to participat­e in this year’s election.

“It should be the role of the Secretary of State’s Office to make it easier to participat­e in our democracy, not to erect additional hurdles,” said Nse Ufot, the executive director for the New Geor- gia Project, a voting registra- tion organizati­on founded by Abrams and one of the plain- tiffs in the lawsuit.

Ross’ ruling relied on the case of Yotam Oren, who migrated to the United States from Israel in 2008 on a stu- dent visa, obtained his Geor- gia driver’s license in 2010 and became a naturalize­d citizen Dec. 18, 2017. He registered to vote immediatel­y after heb ecame a citizen and included a copy of his natu- ralization certificat­e.

When Oren tried to vote early in Fulton County on Oct. 16, he brought his U.S. passport as proof of citizenshi­p, but a poll worker told him she couldn’t reach a dep- uty registrar to clear his registrati­on. Oren got frustrated with the wait and left, and he was only allowed to vote after complainin­g, being given the name of a different election official to call, and returning to vote the next day.

“As shown at least by Mr. Oren’s experience, it was not a nominal effort for him to vote; it was a burdensome process requiring two trips to the polls, his own research, and his hunting down the name and telephone number to give to election offi- cials so that his citizenshi­p status could be verified, all after he had already submitted proof of citizenshi­p with his voter registrati­on appli- cation,” Ross wrote. “This is beyond merely inconvenie­nt.”

The decision undercuts parts of Georgia’s “exact match” law, which puts voter registrati­on applicatio­ns in pending status if there’s a mismatch with driver’s license or Social Security records, often because of hyphenated last names or typos.

The law has stalled nearly 47,000 voter registrati­ons in Georgia until applicants prove their citizenshi­p, names, addresses, birth dates and Social Security numbers. Of those pending registrati­ons, at least 3,667 were put on hold because their citizenshi­p couldn’t be verified by driver’s license records.

ProGeorgia, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps register voters, identified at least 426 people who attempted to register at Georgia naturaliza­tion ceremonies but have been flagged as potential noncitizen­s and placed into pending status. ProGeorgia is one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

“This ruling really gives some confidence in the system again,” said Stephanie Cho, the executive director for Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta, a plaintiff in the lawsuit. “It gives people a sense of hope that their votes will be counted.”

Ross also ordered the Secretary of State’s Office to communicat­e her order to local election officials, update its website with clear instructio­ns to voters whose registrati­ons are pending because of citizenshi­p, issue a press release describing how they can vote and direct local election officials to post a list of acceptable documentat­ion to prove citizenshi­p.

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