Arizona’s attorney general is recommending a dual-track voting system in the state for future elections—one ballot for voters registered with federal registration forms, and one for state elections that voters would only be allowed to participate in with proof of citizenship.
“For state and local matters, registration is contingent on each applicant’s providing evidence of citizenship,” Attorney General Tom Horne wrote in an opinion issued Monday. Horne’s op-ed was in response to Secretary of State Ken Bennett, who questioned Arizona’s voting procedures and asked whether “evidence-of-citizenship” was required to vote.
Bennett’s question comes on the heels of the Supreme Court’s ruling on a 2004 voter registration law that was designed to stop undocumented immigrants from voting in Arizona. Under Proposition 200, a person must provide proof of citizenship in order to register to vote, and show a photo ID in order to receive at ballot at the polls.
The Supreme Court struck down the provision in the law earlier this year that required proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections because it violated the National Voter Registration Act of 1993.









