Officials recently discovered that some people with driver’s licenses issued before 1996 might not have proof of citizenship ...
The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Friday that roughly 98,000 Arizonans whose voter registration status was in limbo will be ...
The court's decision comes after officials uncovered a database error that for two decades mistakenly designated the voters ...
Scott Timmer wrote in the ruling ... “Thank God,” he said in a Friday night post on X. “Thank you Arizona Supreme Court for ...
The decision temporarily resolves a quandary that could have disenfranchised the group and swayed down-ballot races across ...
The Arizona Supreme Court ruled unanimously on Friday that nearly 98,000 people with unverified citizenship documents can now ...
Election officials said they were confident all or nearly all of the voters are citizens, but some allies of former president ...
A decades-old clerical error won't stop about 98,000 registered voters in Arizona from casting ballots in the Nov. 5 general ...
The Arizona Supreme Court ruled nearly 98,000 people whose citizenship documents hadn’t been confirmed can vote in state and ...
We are unwilling on these facts to disenfranchise voters en masse from participating in state contests,” Chief Justice Ann Scott Timmer stated in the ruling.
The Arizona Supreme Court has ruled that the approximately 97,000 voters impacted by an “administrative error” involving the Arizona MVD and voter registration records can cast their full ballots ...
The court’s decision comes after officials uncovered a database error that for two decades mistakenly designated the voters ...