Imperial Valley Press

Appeals court blocks voting requiremen­t

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WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal appeals court on Friday blocked Kansas, Georgia and Alabama from requiring residents to prove they are U.S. citizens when registerin­g to vote using a national form.

The 2-1 ruling is a victory for voting rights groups who said a U.S. election official illegally changed proof-of-citizenshi­p requiremen­ts on the federal registrati­on form at the behest of the three states.

People registerin­g to vote in other states are only required to swear that that they are citizens, not show documentar­y proof.

The three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia acted swiftly in the case, issuing a twopage, unsigned ruling just a day after hearing oral arguments. A federal judge in July had refused to block the requiremen­t while the case is considered on the merits.

The League of Women Voters and civil rights groups argued that the requiremen­ts could lead to the “mass disenfranc­hisement” of thousands of potential voters — many of them poor, African-American and living in rural areas

The groups took issue with the actions of Brian Newby, executive director of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, who changed the federal form shortly after he took the job last November. Newby is a former Kansas election official who had publicly supported the state’s effort to make the change.

The case now returns to the district court for a full hearing on the merits. But the appeals court said the voting rights groups are likely to succeed on the merits.

The change requires people seeking to register to show birth certificat­es, naturaliza­tion papers or other documents as proof of citizenshi­p. Kansas has been actively enforcing the requiremen­t, but Alabama and Georgia have not.

Opponents said Newby had no authority to take the action on his own. Even the Justice Department has refused to defend Newby’s action and has sided with voting rights groups.

The appeals court’s ruling requires the commission to immediatel­y remove the proof-of-citizenshi­p requiremen­t from all forms. It requires the states to treat all registrati­on applicatio­ns filed since January 29 as if they did not have the requiremen­t.

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