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Justices to rule on voter proof of citizenship

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But in 2004, Arizona’s voters adopted Proposition 200, which was intended to prevent illegal immigrants from registering and voting. State residents were told that if they wanted to register to vote, they must submit proof of their citizenship. They could do that by showing an Arizona’s driver’s license, a U.S. passport, a birth certificate or naturalization documents.

This provision has not gone into effect, however. In 2006, the 9th Circuit Court blocked the proof-of-citizenship requirement, but the Supreme Court intervened and set aside its temporary injunction. “The state indisputably has a compelling interest in preserving the integrity of its election process” and in preventing “voter fraud,” the high court said then in a brief unsigned opinion.

Several voting-rights groups persisted and pressed for a full trial on the argument that the state’s extra requirements for registering to vote conflicted with the procedure set in the Motor Voter Act. They lost before a federal judge.

Two years ago, when the case again reached the 9th Circuit, a three-judge panel that included retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, agreed with the challengers and ruled the state law was pre-empted or trumped by the federal law. That decision in turn was affirmed by the full 9th Circuit. The Constitution itself says the “times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives shall be prescribed in each state … but the Congress may at any time by law make or alter such regulations.”

The 9th Circuit majority concluded Congress had altered the voter registration rules, and the states were obliged to follow its lead.

Arizona’s lawyers appealed to the Supreme Court earlier this year, arguing that voting in federal elections should be restricted to citizens only. They said that since Congress wanted only “eligible citizens” to register, its proof-of-citizenship rule complied with the federal law.

Four other states — Georgia, Alabama, Kansas and Tennessee — have enacted similar laws requiring would-be new voters to show a proof of citizenship, the court was told.

The Arizona law is not in effect this year. The justices voted to hear the case of Arizona vs. InterTribal Council, to decide the issue by next June.

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