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
Countering the Lies about Election Reform
The U.S. Supreme Court has pheld Ohio’s election reform law, but liberal courts have struck down voter photo ID laws in other states such as North Carolina and North Dakota and watered down photo ID laws in Texas and Wisconsin. Federal judges also have vacated statutes in Alabama, Georgia and Kansas that permitted states to require proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote. The media and prominent Democrats cannot hide their delight.
A Simple, Three-Step Approach to Defending Voter ID Laws
As the election nears, you can bet voter identification requirements will increasingly be a major topic of conversation.
Five Ways the Election System Is Being Attacked
ACRU Policy Board member J. Christian Adams explains several ways that the Left is undermining the integrity of the electoral process.
Virginia Democrats Hiding the Truth about Non-Citizen Registration Fraud
Hans von Spakovsky dispels the myth that voter fraud does not exist by highlighting Virginia examples of voter fraud by noncitizens and actions by state and local election officials not to prosecute violators or follow state and federal laws.
Virginia Democrats Hiding the Truth about Non-Citizen Voter Fraud
Election integrity foes mistakenly tell us voter fraud is a myth. So when legitimate voter fraud is actually discovered, these foes pretend it didn’t happen, fail to take any steps to investigate or prosecute such cases, or, even worse, try to cover it up.
Americans Affirm Voter ID Laws
If photo ID laws are the bane to minority voting rights that leftists and assorted federal judges claim, you’d expect the public to agree. Not even close.
News
California Will Take Census Question to Trial
12/7: A federal court in California will likely decide whether the US Census can ask questions about US Citizenship in 2020.
Virginia Lawmaker Wants Citizenship Question Removed from the Census
12/4: Virginia representative Gerald Connolly said that he would use the Democratic majority in the House of Representatives to get the citizenship question removed from the 2020 Census.
Census Case Goes to Supreme Court
11/16: The case set to determine whether Wilbur Ross can be deposed over the citizenship question in the 2020 census will go to the Supreme Court.
Supreme Court Allows Census Challenge
11/2: The Supreme Court has decided to let a court challenge to the 2020 Census' citizenship question to move forward.
Judge Forces Georgia to Ease Citizenship Requirements at Polls
11/2: A Federal Judge ruled that Georgia must ease proof of citizenship requirements for suspected noncitizen voters on election day.
Court Denies Government’s Request for Census Trial Postponement
10/26: A federal judge denied the Trump Administration's request to postpone a suit questioning the legality of the citizenship question on the 2020 Census.








