Nearly 100,000 Voters Registered Without Proof of Citizenship as ‘Flaw’ Could Impact Upcoming Elections

Article originally appeared on www.westernjournal.com.


Almost 100,000 Arizona voters are in election limbo because of a flaw that has state officials at odds over the proper remedy.

Arizona passed a law in 2004 that requires documented proof of citizenship to register as “full-ballot voters.” Driver’s licenses are considered valid proof of citizenship. But there’s a problem, because prior to 1996, motor vehicle records did not have proof of citizenship on file.

About 97,000 people are impacted, as officials offer competing solutions.

In one corner, Secretary of State Adrian Fontes said he thinks these are legal voters who should go ahead and vote as they always have, according to KPHO-TV.

But Stepehn Richer, the Maricopa County Recorder, disagrees, according to KSAZ-TV.

The difference of opinion focuses on the contests in which those 97,000 voters can cast a ballot. Fontes thinks it’s OK to let these voters cast ballots in state and local elections as well as federal ones. Richer thinks these …

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