In a blow to voting rights, a federal judge has ruled that the federal government must help Kansas and Arizona to require that people registering to vote show proof of citizenship.
If allowed to stand, the ruling could make it much harder to register new voters, not just in those two places but in other Republican-led states that may now impose similar rules.
Judge Eric Melgren, a George W. Bush appointee, ruled Wednesday that the Election Assistance Commission must update its national voter registration form by adding state-specific instructions for Arizona and Kansas requiring documentary proof of citizenship.
“There’s been a media cover-up of the seriousness of voter fraud in Arizona,” the state’s Republican attorney general, Tom Horne, said in a statement celebrating the ruling. “Today’s decision is an important victory for the people of Arizona against the Obama Administration, assuring that only Arizona residents and not illegals, vote in Arizona elections.”
The federal registration form requires users to check a box affirming, on penalty of perjury, that they’re citizens. But in 2004, Arizona had passed a law requiring people to show proof of citizenship when registering. It was struck down by the Supreme Court last year as it applies to federal elections. But in the same ruling, Justice Antonin Scalia suggested that states could require proof of citizenship in state and local elections.









