The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Trial has national implicatio­ns

Eyes on voting rights case out of Kansas

- By ROXANA HEGEMAN

A conservati­ve Republican who has supported President Donald Trump’s unsubstant­iated claim that millions of illegal votes cost Trump the popular vote in 2016 will have to prove Kansas has a problem with voter fraud if he’s to win a legal challenge to voter registrati­on requiremen­ts he’s championed.

The case headed to trial starting Tuesday has national implicatio­ns for voting rights as Republican­s pursue laws they say are aimed at preventing voter fraud but that critics contend disenfranc­hise minorities and college students who tend to vote Democratic and who may not have such documentat­ion readily available. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who is running for governor and was part of Trump’s nowdisband­ed commission on voter fraud , has long championed such laws and is defending a Kansas requiremen­t that people present documentar­y proof of citizenshi­p — such as a birth certificat­e, naturaliza­tion papers or a passport — when they register to vote.

“Kansas is the site of the major showdown on this issue, and Kris Kobach has been such a prominent advocate for concerns about noncitizen­s voting and other fraudulent behavior. He essentiall­y led the Trump commission on vote fraud and integrity and he has been a lightning rod — which makes him a hero to people on his side of the argument in trying to tighten up voting laws, but makes him kind of a mischiefma­ker and a distractio­n for people who are on the other side,” said Barry Burden, director of the Elections Research

Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Courts have temporaril­y blocked Kobach from fully enforcing the Kansas law, with the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver calling it “a mass denial of a fundamenta­l constituti­onal right.”

The trial before U.S District Judge Julie Robinson in Kansas City, Kansas, centers on the National Voter Registrati­on Act, commonly known as the Motor Voter Law, which allows people to register to vote when applying for a driver’s license. Robinson will decide whether Kobach has legal authority to demand such citizenshi­p paperwork, and a key considerat­ion will be whether Kansas has a significan­t problem with noncitizen­s registerin­g to vote.

Dale Ho, director for the Voting Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union said the case is about what national standards the U.S. will have for voter registrati­on.

“It is also a case about this false narrative of noncitizen­s participat­ing in elections — which Kobach has said for years has been happening in large amounts

— and now we are going to see his evidence,” Ho said. “His evidence is going to be put on the stand in open court for a federal judge to rule on, and I think the public will finally get to see how little evidence he actually has.”

Kobach’s office didn’t respond to an interview request ahead of the trial, but he has argued in court filings that the law is necessary to prevent voter fraud, contending that even a small number of noncitizen­s voting could sway a close election.

No other state has been as aggressive as Kansas in imposing such proof-of-citizenshi­p requiremen­ts. Arizona and Georgia have proof-of-citizenshi­p laws that are not currently being enforced, according to the ACLU. Arizona is the only other state with a similar law in effect, but that law is far more lenient and allows people to satisfy it by writing their driver’s license number on the voter registrati­on form.

“All of these states are in limbo while we wait for courts to settle the dispute,” Burden said, adding that other states might be interested

in similar laws if Kobach prevails.

Kansas has about 1.8 million registered voters. Kobach has told the court he has been able to document a total of 127 noncitizen­s who at least tried to register to vote. Forty-three of them were successful in registerin­g, he says, and 11 have voted since 2000. Five of those people registered at motor vehicle offices, according to Kobach.

In the first three years after the Kansas law went into effect in 2013, about one in seven voter registrati­on applicatio­ns in Kansas were blocked for lack of proof of citizenshi­p — with nearly half of them for people under the age of 30, according to court documents. Between 2013 and 2016, more than 35,000 Kansans were unable to register to vote.

In temporaril­y blocking the law for people who register at driver’s license offices, Robinson in May 2016 said it likely violates a provision in federal election law that requires only “minimal informatio­n”— such as an oath under penalty of perjury that the person is a citizen — to determine a voter’s eligibilit­y.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia also has temporaril­y blocked the enforcemen­t of

the law for people who register to vote using the federal form in a separate legal challenge.

 ?? JOHN HANNA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Jan. 4, 2018 photo, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach speaks during an interview in Topeka, Kan. Legal challenges to a Kansas law requiring proof of citizenshi­p to register to vote, will go on trial next week in a case with national...
JOHN HANNA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Jan. 4, 2018 photo, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach speaks during an interview in Topeka, Kan. Legal challenges to a Kansas law requiring proof of citizenshi­p to register to vote, will go on trial next week in a case with national...
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