Ariz. high court rules nearly 98,000 residents affected by glitch are eligible to vote

Sept. 21 (UPI) — A decades-old clerical error won’t stop about 98,000 registered voters in Arizona from casting ballots in the Nov. 5 general election, the Arizona Supreme Court has ruled.

Friday’s decision came three days after Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer filed an emergency petition seeking the reinstatement of voting rights for 97,928 people who were purged due to an issue with the state’s requirement for voters to confirm their citizenship status.

A 2004 clerical error resulted in the residents being registered to vote despite not providing documentation of their proof of citizenship.

An Arizona law that took effect in 2005 requires documented proof of citizenship status to register to vote.

Driver’s licenses issued after October 1996 were accepted as proof of citizenship, but the state’s voter registration system enabled those who obtained licenses before 1996 and later received replacement licenses without providing documented proof of citizenship to also be registered.

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