U.S. voting commission vice chair urged
new voting restrictions
Send a link to a friend
[October 07, 2017]
By Julia Harte
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The vice chairman of
a voter fraud panel set up by U.S. President Donald Trump began soon
after the election to draft legislative changes that would allow states
to require voters to prove their citizenship when registering, court
records show.
Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who has been on the panel since
its creation in May, exchanged emails on the matter with Trump's
transition team the day after the November presidential election,
according to records unsealed by a federal judge on Thursday.
Kobach, who like Trump is a Republican, was ordered to release the
records as part of a legal challenge that has enjoined a state law that
required Kansans to provide proof of citizenship when registering to
vote.
The records showed that by the day after the election, Kobach had
already started drafting legislative changes that would permit all
states to impose proof-of-citizenship requirements by amending the
National Voter Registration Act, which lets Americans register to vote
when they apply for driver's licenses.
The records shed light on a photograph taken several days after the
election that showed Kobach, then a contender for a Cabinet post,
standing with Trump and holding a document partially obscured by his arm
and titled "Department of Homeland Security Kobach Strategic Plan for
first 365 days."
Kobach fought the public release of the documents, which included a
heavily redacted version of the document in the photograph, for months
in federal court.
He and his spokeswoman did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
[to top of second column] |
President-elect Donald Trump stands with Kansas Secretary of State
Kris Kobach before their meeting at Trump National Golf Club in
Bedminster, New Jersey, U.S., November 20, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Any changes to the National Voter Registration Act, or "motor-voter
law," require congressional approval.
Civil rights groups said they fear Kobach is using the Trump voting
panel to drum up fake proof of widespread non-citizen voter fraud to
persuade Congress to change the law.
Trump has said without evidence that there was widespread voter
fraud in the November election. Most state election officials and
election law experts say U.S. voter fraud is rare.
Requiring people to show birth certificates or other
proof-of-citizenship when registering would be overly burdensome and
would discourage young people, such as college students, said Dale
Ho, director of the voting project at the American Civil Liberties
Union.
The ACLU sued Kobach over the Kansas law, which it said blocked more
than 35,000 people, nearly 14 percent of new registered voters, from
voting over two years.
(Reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Lisa Von
Ahn)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|