By Jesse Byrnes
June 29, 2015
The
Supreme Court has declined to hear a case allowing states to require
proof of citizenship for those applying to vote in federal elections,
effectively upholding a lower court ruling against Kansas and Arizona.
Those
states wanted the U.S. Election Assistance Commission to change its
registration requirements to include proof of citizenship for those
applying to vote in federal elections, as the states require for those
using their state forms.
By
not taking the case, the Supreme Court leaves in place a November 2014
ruling from the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the states
cannot require the documentation for applicants using the so-called
“federal form.”
Voting
rights advocates hailed the court's decision to not take up the case,
Kobach v. United States Election Assistance Commission. Currently, the
federal agency's form only requires applicants swear eligibility under
penalty of perjury.
“This
is a very big deal,” Rick Hasen, a University of California Irvine Law
professor, wrote on his election law blog. “Kobach had the potential to
shift more power away from the federal government in administering
elections toward the states.”
The Supreme Court ruled in 2013 that Arizona could not require those using the federal form to provide proof of citizenship.
“Arizona
citizens can continue to participate in voter registration drives
without worrying about not having proof of citizenship documents,” said
Shirley Sandelands of the League of Women Voters, one of the voting
rights groups that urged the court to not hear the appeal.
The
Brennan Center for Justice and several law firms that represented the
group praised the Supreme Court in a joint statement for “securing a
critical victory to strengthen the right to vote in federal elections in
Arizona and Kansas and reaffirming the important role Congress plays in
preserving a fair voter registration process across the country.”
“The
Supreme Court decision not to review was not particularly surprising
given the fact that there was no circuit split yet,” Kansas Secretary of
State Kris Kobach, who filed the joint appeal to the federal appellate
court decision with Arizona Secretary of State Michele Reagan, said in
an interview with Roll Call.
Typically,
Kobach told the newspaper, “the Supreme Court favors reviewing
decisions where one circuit has gone one way and another circuit has
gone another way. It appears that the Supreme Court is waiting for
another circuit to weigh in.”
Kobach expects the 11th circuit with jurisdiction over the two states to eventually weigh in, according to Roll Call.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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