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A records flaw could block thousands in Arizona from voting in state and local races

A voter places a ballot in a drop box outside of the Maricopa County Elections Department on Aug. 2, 2022 in Phoenix. A records flaw risks blocking nearly 100,000 people from voting in state and local races in Arizona in the upcoming elections.
Justin Sullivan
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A voter places a ballot in a drop box outside of the Maricopa County Elections Department on Aug. 2, 2022 in Phoenix. A records flaw risks blocking nearly 100,000 people from voting in state and local races in Arizona in the upcoming elections.

Election officials in Arizona have discovered a flaw in the state鈥檚 voter registration system that could disqualify nearly 100,000 people from voting in state and local races just weeks before early ballots will hit mailboxes.

A state law that went into effect in 2004 requires Arizona voters to provide to register to vote in state and local elections, though individuals that do not provide proof can still register to vote for federal offices like president and U.S. Senate using a federal only form.

Arizona鈥檚 voter registration system pulls information from the state鈥檚 driver's license database as a method of proving citizenship, but the Maricopa County Recorder鈥檚 office found a flaw with the database, which showed that some people provided proof of citizenship when they applied for a driver鈥檚 license when in fact they may not have.

The issue affects just a tiny fraction of the roughly 4.1 million people registered to vote in Arizona 鈥 roughly 98,000 voters who got a license before Oct. 1, 1996, said Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes on Tuesday.

鈥淭hat's the day when Arizona started requiring proof of legal presence in the United States to get a driver's license,鈥 Fontes said.

Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer, who oversees early voting and voter registration in the nation鈥檚 fourth largest county, said his office discovered a glitch in that system while verifying the citizenship of a person with a pre-1996 license. The office found that the person was a lawful permanent resident but not a citizen eligible to vote.

Fontes said there is no evidence that person voted or attempted to cast a ballot.

But the discovery sent election officials in Arizona down a rabbit hole that revealed tens of thousands of voters in every county in the state have not provided the documentation required to vote a full ballot under Arizona law.

That doesn鈥檛 mean those people aren鈥檛 eligible to vote, though, Fontes said.

鈥淭his was discovered not because somebody was voting illegally and not because somebody was attempting to vote illegally,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s far as we can tell, this was basic voter roll maintenance.鈥

Now, Richer and Fontes are asking the Arizona Supreme Court to decide how to deal with the voters affected by the revelation.

In an emergency petition filed with the court, Richer, a Republican who has defended the county鈥檚 election systems from critics like former President Donald Trump, argues the 98,000 voters should not be allowed to vote in federal elections unless they provide proof of citizenship by Election Day.

鈥淚t is my position that these registrants have not satisfied Arizona's documented proof of citizenship law, and therefore can only vote a 鈥榝ederal-only鈥 ballot,鈥 said Richer, who was by a Trump ally.

That "federal only" status would allow them to vote in races like the presidential contest between Trump and Vice President Harris, but would prevent those voters from weighing in on a lengthy list of proposed laws going before Arizona voters this year, including a measure to put abortion rights into the state Constitution.

Fontes, a Democrat, called Richer鈥檚 filing a 鈥渇riendly litigation,鈥 saying their offices coordinated the legal effort in order to obtain a firm legal ruling about how to proceed.

But Fontes is taking a different position than his Republican counterpart. He said his office plans to file a reply with the court, asking it to allow the 98,000 impacted voters to vote a full ballot this year.

He said it is too close to an election to make these types of changes to the voter rolls and he doesn鈥檛 believe there is evidence that a significant number of the affected individuals are not eligible to vote.

鈥淏y the way, every single one of these voters has met the minimum criteria in swearing an affirmation under penalty of perjury that they would have to do to vote in every election across the rest of the United States of America,鈥 he said, adding that only Arizona requires additional proof of citizenship to vote.

He said he hopes to have a ruling by the end of the week as the state begins sending ballots to overseas citizens and military personnel. If that isn鈥檛 possible, he hopes for a ruling before the state begins sending out early mail-in ballots on Oct. 9.

Fontes acknowledged that publicly disclosing the problems with the voter registration system is likely to inflame already high tensions in Arizona and Maricopa County, hotbeds of unproven allegations of voter fraud following Trump鈥檚 loss to President Biden in 2020.

鈥淭his has already spurred new conspiracy theories about this election, but those conspiracy theories are just as good as all of the other conspiracy theories are,鈥 Fontes said. 鈥淲e have the facts. We are bringing them forward in a very transparent way.鈥

But Fontes said election officials had no choice other than to go public.

鈥淲e are being open and transparent in bringing this issue forward,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are making absolutely certain that folks understand that good, bad or indifferent, we are going to keep the public informed.鈥

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat and former secretary of state, said the Arizona Department of Transportation鈥檚 motor vehicle division fixed the problem with the driver鈥檚 license database.

鈥淎fter Recorder Richer brought an erroneous voter registration record to my attention, my team identified and fixed an administrative error that originated in 2004, and affects longtime residents who received a driver鈥檚 license before 1996,鈥 Hobbs said in a statement.

Fontes said the fix will solve the problem moving forward.

Copyright 2024 KJZZ

Wayne Schutsky
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