Kobach et. al. v United States Election Assistance Commission

Seeking to protect the rights of eligible voters in Arizona and Kansas, Project Vote moved to intervene in the case of Kris W. Kobach et al. v. United States Election Assistance Commission on November 13, 2013. The states of Arizona and Kansas want to change the national voter registration form’s instructions to require that applicants in those states provide proof-of-citizenship documents in order to register to vote.

This lawsuit, which Arizona and Kansas officials filed against the U.S. Election Assistance Commission in August 2013, follows the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling last summer in Arizona v. Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc. In June 2013, the Court found that Arizona cannot require documentary proof of citizenship to be submitted with the federal voter registration form, because states are required to accept and use the form under the National Voter Registration Act. Project Vote participated in the litigation culminating in the Supreme Court case. On November 13, 2013, Project Vote sought to enter this new case and continues its fight against these harmful requirements.

In March 2014, a U.S. District Judge in Kansas ruled that the EAC had to fulfill the request from Kansas and Arizona. The EAC and a number of voting rights groups—including Project Vote, the League of Women Voters, Common Cause, and others—filed to appeal, but the district judge refused to stay his order pending the outcome.

In May 2014, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit overruled the previous judge on the stay. Kansas and Arizona appealed the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, which declined to review the case.

Most Recent / Relevant Items

Advanced Filters and Sorting

9 results returned

Appeals court overturns state’s proof-of-citizenship requirements on federal voting forms

News Item See all

A federal appeals court has ruled that Kansas cannot require proof-of-citizenship documents from prospective voters who register using a federal voter-registration form… Read more

Court issues temporary stay over voter citizenship

News Item See all

Kansas and Arizona residents can continue to register to vote for now using a federal form without having to provide proof of citizenship… Read more

Feds Seek Stay of Order in Voter Citizenship Case

News Item See all

Federal election officials have asked a judge to temporarily suspend his own order that they help Kansas and Arizona enforce state laws requiring voters to prove their U.S. citizenship… Read more

Voter rights groups appeal ruling on documentation

News Item See all

Voting rights groups filed an appeal Friday of a judge’s order that federal election officials must help Kansas and Arizona enforce state laws requiring new voters to provide documentation proving their U.S. citizenship. Read more

Judge to decide proof-of-citizenship voting rule

News Item See all

A decision on whether states have a constitutional right to require proof-of-citizenship documentation for their residents who register to vote using a national form is now in the hands of a federal judge in a case with broad implications for voting rights. Read more

Feds deny state bids to tighten voter registration

News Item See all

The EAC found Friday that heightened proof-of-citizenship requirements likely would hinder eligible citizens from voting in federal elections. Read more

ACLU sues Kansas over voter registration requirements

News Item See all

The American Civil Liberties Union is suing Kansas over the state's refusal to allow residents to vote in state elections without showing proof of citizenship. Read more

Arizona Will Ignore Federal Court’s Ruling on Restrictive Voter Law

News Item See all

A tug-of-war is emerging in this 2012 swing state over two different voter registration forms. Read more

9th Circuit Nixes Arizona’s Proof of Citizenship Requirement, Upholds Voter ID

News Item See all

Michael Slater, executive director of Project Vote, called the ruling “a major victory for voting rights in the state of Arizona.” Read more