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Saturday, September 21, 2024

Marshall files 24-state brief on voter eligibility ahead of 2024 election

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Attorney General Steve Marshall | Official website

Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall has filed a 24-state brief before the U.S. Supreme Court defending election integrity in Arizona. The case, Republican National Committee v. Mi Familia Vota, involves federal courts enjoining an Arizona law that requires proof of citizenship for anyone registering to vote in state or presidential elections. The RNC and members of the Arizona legislature intervened when it became clear that Arizona’s Attorney General would not defend the law's enforcement for this election cycle. The emergency applicants have asked the Supreme Court to stay the ruling of the Ninth Circuit.

“Yet again we deal with the impacts of disastrous immigration policies promoted by President Biden and his ‘Border Czar’ Kamala Harris. Just last week, we were forced to sue to stop them from offering Obamacare to illegal immigrants,” Attorney General Steve Marshall said. “Now it appears that blue states want to register illegals to vote in the 2024 Presidential election. This case should also serve as a call to action for Congress to pass legislation, like the SAVE Act, to ensure that Americans alone decide who will govern them.”

The amicus brief argues that the National Voter Registration Act permits states to verify that only citizens register to vote in presidential and state elections and that federal law does not preempt state sovereignty over its elections.

Many states, including Alabama, have adopted laws or regulations requiring voters show proof of citizenship to register to vote. However, over the years, federal courts have limited states' authority to secure their own elections.

“Voting by noncitizens, both legal and illegal, is real,” reads the brief. And “even small voting blocs can have outsized effects on electoral outcomes.” A state's interest in counting every legal vote must be protected and secured as this is “the heart of representative government.”

Attorney General Marshall joined the amicus brief led by Kansas and West Virginia. Also joining were attorneys general from Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma South Carolina South Dakota Texas Utah and Virginia.

Click here to read the full brief.

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