Nearly 98,000 folks whose U.S. citizenship has not been confirmed will probably be allowed to vote within the upcoming state and native elections, the Arizona Supreme Court dominated Friday.
The ruling got here after a “coding oversight” in state software program prompted the swing state’s Democratic Secretary of State Adrian Fontes to insist that he would ship out ballots to these affected anyway.
The database error known as into query the citizenship standing of 100,000 registered Arizona voters, affecting people who obtained their driver’s licenses earlier than October 1996, and subsequently acquired duplicates earlier than registering to vote after 2004.
Fontes and Stephen Richer, the Republican Maricopa County recorder, disagreed on what standing the voters ought to maintain following the “coding oversight.”
“This was found not as a result of any person was voting illegally and never as a result of any person was trying to vote illegally, so far as we will inform,” Fontes mentioned at a Tuesday afternoon information convention. “And this was fundamental voter roll upkeep, and it confirmed us that there’s this difficulty.”
Richer filed a particular motion Tuesday asking the state Supreme Court to settle the query.
“It is my place that these registrants haven’t happy Arizona’s documented proof of citizenship legislation, and subsequently can solely vote a ‘FED ONLY’ poll,” Richer wrote on X.
The error comes as Arizona Republicans and a conservative watchdog group have been pushing for stricter voting measures that require proof of U.S. citizenship to take part in state and federal elections. Arizona can also be a swing state that flipped blue within the 2020 presidential election.
Fox News Digital’s Jamie Jospeh and the Associated Press contributed to this report.