Proof of Citizenship
The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution stipulates that the right to vote in federal elections for the Senate, House of Representatives and presidency is limited to U.S. citizens.
With few exceptions, most state constitutions explicitly authorize only resident citizens to vote in state and local elections.
Currently, there is no state or national database or system to verify the citizenship of voters. Many states utilize self-reported citizenship information from non-citizen residents, but some use the national Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements Program database at the Department of Homeland Security to assist in verifying citizenship status. Several states attempting to prevent non-citizen voting have enacted laws requiring proof of U.S. citizenship of registrants when registering to vote.
Our current honor system on the part of registrants under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 includes a provision that created a federal voter registration form that requires applicants under penalty of perjury to check a “yes” or “no” box as to whether they are U.S. citizens. However, the federal form does not require any proof of citizenship, and its use has been shown to be ineffective in deterring non-citizens from registering to vote.
This issue has been hotly contested in the courts with advocates for this sensible safeguard against fraudulent voter registration up against a solid flank of left-wing groups such as Common Cause, Project Vote, the League of Women Voters and the American Civil Liberties Union.
In April 2015, the ACRU filed an amicus brief in Kobach v. United States Election Assistance Commission at the U.S. Supreme Court that included evidence that non-citizens in Texas were registering to vote using the federal form. On June 29, 2015, the Supreme Court denied Kansas’s and Arizona’s writ of certiorari petition, thus letting stand a 10th Circuit ruling that the states may not require applicants using the federal voter registration form to show documents proving citizenship when registering to vote in federal races.
ACRU Commentary
Hundreds of Illegal Voters Revealed in Philadelphia
Many of them registered while either applying for or renewing their driver’s licenses.
NBC’s Jane Timm Sparks Outrage in Attacking Trump’s Election Commission
The best resisting always starts with a headline designed to incite.
Automatic Voter Registration Expands Government Automatically
Often, there is no verification of citizenship or other qualifications prior to registration.
Maryland City about to Become Latest to Let Non-citizens Vote
No documents will be needed for non-citizens, green card holders, undocumented fence-jumpers, or visa over-stays.
New Report Exposes Thousands of Illegal Votes in 2016 Election
"With this report, we may have a clue as to why some states are resisting providing this data."
Project Vote Bites the Dust
The George Soros-funded spawn of ACORN shut down on May 31.
News
The President Could Still Put Citizenship on the 2020 Census
7/4: The 14th amendment to the Constitution could offer President Trump the legal reasoning he needs to include the citizenship question on the 2020 census without going against the SCOTUS ruling.
Gerrymandering Symposium: Janus-Like Judicial Restraint in Political Gerrymanders and the Census
6/28: Supreme Court precedent is clear that “a jurisdiction may engage in constitutional political gerrymandering” and that “political considerations are inseparable from districting and apportionment.”
Spakovsky: Will Supreme Court Ruling Force Trump to Seek Delay of 2020 Census?
6/27: ACRU Policy Board Member Hans von Spakovsky reports on why the President might have to delay the 2020 census because the Supreme Court failed to decisively rule on the census citizenship question.
Liberals Use Fake News to Fight Citizenship on the Census
6/8: The Justice Department wrote a letter claiming that liberal groups are using fake news to influence the Supreme Court's decision on the 2020 Census case.
Judge Won’t Stop Census Case
6/5: A federal judge overruled Democratic objections that the Trump administration lied about their intentions for the citizenship question on the 2020 census.
Texas Secretary of State Resigns Amid Voter Purge Problems
5/27: Texas Secretary of State David Whitley resigned amid accusations that his office's attempted voter roll purge incorrectly questioned 100,000 Texans' citizenship status.