The Kansas City Star

Trump, Johnson proof of citizenshi­p plan echoes failed KS law

- BY JONATHAN SHORMAN AND DANIEL DESROCHERS jshorman@kcstar.com ddesrocher­s@kcstar.com

When Kris Kobach, then the Kansas secretary of state, met with Donald Trump shortly after the 2016 election, he brought along a plan that included changing a federal voter registrati­on law to “promote proofof-citizenshi­p requiremen­ts.”

More than seven years later, Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson want to go further.

At a recent Mar-a-Lago news conference, Trump, the former president running for a second term, looked on as Johnson condemned the lack of a federal requiremen­t that individual­s prove their citizenshi­p to vote.

Non-citizens are already prohibited from voting in federal elections, but the speaker, a Louisiana Republican, echoed baseless concerns that large numbers of migrants are registerin­g to vote in the run up to the 2024 election.

“We think that’s a serious problem. So what we’re going to do is the House Republican­s are introducin­g a bill that will require proof of citizenshi­p to vote. It seems like common sense,” Johnson said.

But proof of citizenshi­p voter requiremen­ts aren’t a new idea. More than a decade ago, Kansas enacted its own law.

It imploded.

The Kansas Legislatur­e passed a sweeping elections security bill in 2011. Along with requiring voters to show a photo ID at the polls, the measure mandated new voter registrati­on applicants provide documentar­y proof of citizenshi­p such as a birth certificat­e, U.S. passport or naturaliza­tion documents.

A U.S. district court judge and a federal appeals court both found the requiremen­t unconstitu­tional and struck it down. Kobach, now the Kansas attorney general, championed the law as secretary of state and personally led a disastrous de

fense of it during a federal civil trial. The judge found him in contempt and ordered remedial legal education.

Kansas’ experience with its proof of citizenshi­p law offers a window into the significan­t challenges any federal requiremen­t would face. At the high-stakes 2018 bench trial, Kobach produced few examples of non-citizens who registered to vote – at most 67 non-citizens registered or attempted to register to vote over 19 years.

“One would hope that folks would follow the example, right, and figure out the natural conclusion of this which is that it is not legally tenable, it is not popular, it is not based on reality,” ACLU of Kansas director Micah Kubic said.

“But instead, they continue to follow what he explains about it and what his narrative is rather than the results.”

Congress almost certainly won’t pass a proof of citizenshi­p law this year. Even if the House passes a bill, the measure would be dead on arrival in the Senate where Republican­s are in the minority. President Joe Biden would be virtually guaranteed to veto it.

But Johnson’s decision to float the plan during a joint appearance with Trump suggests the idea could reemerge in a second Trump administra­tion. If Trump emphasizes the issue, Republican­controlled state legislatur­es may decide to act.

And if Trump loses the election, Johnson and other Republican­s have provided a groundwork to characteri­ze the loss as fraudulent. Trump continues to assert falsely that the 2020 election was stolen and the proof of citizenshi­p idea sets up migrants as a possible scapegoat for a second loss.

“You know what, if the numbers are so high, there are so many illegals in the country that if only one out of every 100 voted, they would cast potentiall­y hundreds of thousands of votes in an election. That can turn an election,” Johnson said.

“This could be a tight election in our congressio­nal races around the country. It could, if there’s enough votes, affect the presidenti­al election.”

What Johnson’s comments left out is that states already take steps to enforce bans on noncitizen voting. Before and after Kansas’ proof of citizenshi­p law, voter registrati­on applicants must attest they are citizens under penalty of perjury.

U.S. District Court Judge Julie Robinson, who held the trial over the Kansas law, wrote in an opinion that the evidence supports the conclusion that “very few noncitizen­s in Kansas successful­ly registered to vote under an attestatio­n regime.”

At the same time, the proof of citizenshi­p law – sometimes called DPOC for documentar­y proof of citizenshi­p – left thousands of residents who were unable to provide proof of citizenshi­p on a “suspense list” and therefore unable to cast a ballot. More than 31,000 residents in total either had their voter registrati­on applicatio­ns suspended or canceled.

“In sum, we conclude that the DPOC requiremen­t imposed a significan­t burden on the right to vote,” an opinion from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit said.

‘IT JUST ISN’T HAPPENING’

Johnson hasn’t released a proof of citizenshi­p bill. During the recent Johnson-Trump press conference, Johnson didn’t outline how citizens without easy access to documents would prove their citizenshi­p – or what documents would be acceptable. He said the plan would require states to remove noncitizen­s from existing voter rolls.

In Kansas, residents without the necessary documents were allowed to appear before the State Election Board, where officials judged whether they were a citizen. The provision led to public hearings where residents made their case.

For instance, in one 2016 meeting a 75-yearold Osage County woman born in Arkansas recounted how she had lost her birth certificat­e and Arkansas couldn’t find a copy. The woman pointed to her presence in Census records, a record of her birth in a family Bible, baptismal records and documents about her high school attendance. The panel certified she was a citizen.

When the ACLU filed a lawsuit against the Kansas law in 2016, Donna Bucci decided to join. A 57-yearold Wichita resident at the time the lawsuit began, Bucci was placed on the suspense list and later purged from the state’s voter registrati­on system after she was unable to provide proof of citizenshi­p.

Bucci was born in Maryland, but didn’t have a copy of her birth certificat­e and Maryland’s $20 fee would have been a financial burden.

Speaking to The Star recently, Bucci said lawmakers need to “get out of kindergart­en” and start working.

“Every time you turn around, they want to take someone else to court,”

Bucci said. “If they spent as much time in the House doing what they’re supposed to be doing, we wouldn’t be going through all this BS.”

Josh Douglas, an elections law professor at the University of Kentucky, said a federal proof of citizenshi­p law would encounter problems complying with the U.S. Constituti­on’s Equal Protection Clause, which requires equal treatment under the law.

Still, he said the U.S. Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Roberts “has been extremely deferentia­l to government laws on voting.”

The U.S. Supreme Court in recent years has shrunk the power of the federal government to protect voting rights by limiting the sweep of the federal Voting Rights Act. But it also rejected a request to review the appeals court decision striking down Kansas’ proof of citizenshi­p law.

Mark Johnson, a Kansas City-based attorney who represente­d plaintiffs in one of two key lawsuits against the Kansas law, said he doesn’t believe Congress could pass a constituti­onal proof of citizenshi­p law.

“Even before you get there the question is, is there a problem that this law would correct and there isn’t a problem,” Johnson said. “If there is a concern that non-citizens are voting, it just isn’t happening.”

Kobach told The Star that he supports Trump and Speaker Johnson seeking a federal proof of citizenshi­p law. He said that if the U.S. Supreme Court had taken the Kansas case, it would have likely reversed the appeals court decision.

“The Kansas law can and should serve as a model for federal legislatio­n,” Kobach said in a written response to questions provided by a spokespers­on.

Kobach, who co-chaired Trump’s voter fraud commission, didn’t answer a question about whether he has advised Trump or the Trump 2024 campaign about election law.

When Kobach met with Trump in the weeks following the 2016 election, he was photograph­ed heading into the meeting with a partially visible plan for the Department of Homeland Security. Under a section titled “Stop Aliens from Voting,” the document read, “Draft Amendments to National Voter Registrati­on Act to promote proof-of-citizenshi­p requiremen­ts.”

The National Voter Registrati­on Act – often called the motor voter law – requires states to offer residents the opportunit­y to register to vote at motor vehicle offices.

The ACLU later obtained another portion of Kobach’s plan, which outlines changing the NVRA to provide states leeway to impose their own proof-of-citizenshi­p requiremen­ts. While Kobach’s November 2016 plan for Trump would have made it easier for states to adopt proof of citizenshi­p rules, Johnson’s new plan would go further by mandating it at the federal level.

WILL THE HOUSE ACT?

Johnson’s appearance with Trump recently was seen as an important endorsemen­t of the speaker by the former president at a moment when he faces a looming effort by lawmakers to remove him. But the proof of citizenshi­p

proposal itself hasn’t attracted as much attention inside the Capitol, which is consumed with the House’s efforts to pass foreign aid bills and the Senate’s impeachmen­t trial of the Homeland Security secretary.

Rep. Ron Estes, a Wichita Republican, took a moment to realize which proposal The Star was referring to when asked about Johnson’s plan. He echoed concerns over states allowing non-citizens to vote (a small number of states allow noncitizen­s to vote in some local elections but federal law bans non-citizens from voting in federal elections).

“We’ve had a long history where states have the responsibi­lity to actually conduct the voting itself. However, there is a federal definition of what it takes to elect federal office holders in all forms and to be seated here in Congress,” Estes said. “So that’s a purview we still have at the federal level.”

But some conservati­ves in the past have argued that states have sweeping power over who is qualified to vote.

In an amicus brief asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review the challenge to Kansas’ proof of citizenshi­p law, a coalition of GOP-leaning states said, “States have the exclusive constituti­onal authority to set voter qualificat­ions.”

The 2020 brief, which was signed by Eric Schmitt, then the Republican Missouri attorney general and now a U.S. senator, said that “federal control over who may vote has come in the form of constituti­onal amendments, not statutes passed by Congress.”

Schmitt last week said

there should be greater protection­s to ensure noncitizen­s aren’t voting. He said the Missouri General Assembly “is talking about putting that on the ballot, too” – a reference to a proposed state constituti­onal amendment that would make changing the state constituti­on more difficult.

One version of the proposal includes language prohibitin­g non-citizens from voting on state constituti­onal amendments, even though they currently aren’t allowed to cast ballots.

“When you’re talking about sort of threshold issues, non-citizens voting certainly rises to the level of, I think, us moving something,” Schmitt said.

Kubic, the ACLU of Kansas director, said supporters of proof of citizenshi­p requiremen­ts were essentiall­y attempting to have it both ways.

He noted the fierce opposition in Congress to H.B. 1. The Democratic bill, introduced in 2021, would require states to offer same-day voter registrati­on for federal elections and included other election and campaign finance overhauls.

“What you can do is say the federal government should be guaranteei­ng and expanding the right to vote at every turn – that is a consistent position. But that is not their position,” Kubic said.

“Their position is instead whoever is going to be the most restrictiv­e, whether the state or federal government, that’s the entity that should have the power at that moment.”

 ?? SIPA USA TNS ?? President Donald Trump, left, and Kris Kobach, the Kansas secretary of state, on Nov. 20, 2016, at the clubhouse of Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club, in Bedminster Township, N.J.
SIPA USA TNS President Donald Trump, left, and Kris Kobach, the Kansas secretary of state, on Nov. 20, 2016, at the clubhouse of Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club, in Bedminster Township, N.J.

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