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Justices to rule on voter proof of citizenship

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — The Supreme Court will weigh in on the controversy over voter fraud and decide early next year whether Arizona can require residents to show proof of their citizenship before they register to vote.

The justices agreed to hear Arizona’s appeal of an anti-fraud provision that was adopted as a ballot initiative in 2004, but was struck down by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Without this provision, “Arizona is forced to accept what amounts to an honors system as to whether the applicants are citizens or not,” said the state’s Attorney General Thomas C. Horne. He was referring to the federal “motor voter” law that allows people to register to vote in federal elections by filling out a card and simply signing a certification that they are indeed citizens eligible to vote.

In the past two years, legal battles have been fought in several states over new laws that would require registered voters to show proof of their identity before casting a ballot. Typically, these laws require a photo ID card or other documents that would verify the voters’ identity. Critics of these provisions have said there is no evidence of people seeking to cast a ballot by impersonating another person at a polling place.

The disputed Arizona provision, by contrast, focuses on the process for registering to vote, and it tries to prevent non-citizens and illegal immigrants from having their names added to the voter rolls. In its legal papers, the state pointed to examples of several non-citizens who had registered and voted in the past.

The Supreme Court will hear the Arizona case early next year and try to resolve a conflict between two laws, one federal and one state.

President Bill Clinton signed the National Voter Registration Act, known as the Motor Voter Act, into the law in 1993. It was intended to make it easier for Americans to register to vote, including when they update their driver’s license. Voter rolls are kept by counties and states. The new federal law sought to simplify the process by letting “eligible citizens” fill out a voter card after which they would be added to the rolls.

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