ARIZONA VOTER LAW SIGNED BY GOVERNOR

Democrats want their Flock to believe that the days of Jim Crow are back.

That is their rallying cry come election time.  But reality does exist in America. Georgia and most recently Arizona have passed reasonable voting rights laws.  Arizona requires proof of citizenship to vote, but Others believe differently. In many communities we have seen Voters rise from the dead at election time.  Imagine that?

But make no mistake about it, these OTHERS have Never produced that ONE CITIZEN who was prohibited from voting. WHERE IS THE BEEF?Gov. Doug Ducey and his fellow Republicans in Arizona have sought to pass a series of bills tightening voting laws and reshaping the electoral process.

 Arizona Passes Proof-of-Citizenship Law for Voting in Presidential Elections

Voting rights groups said the legislation signed into law by Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, could prevent tens of thousands of people from voting for president.

Gov. Doug Ducey of Arizona has signed legislation requiring voters to prove their citizenship in order to vote in a presidential election, swiftly drawing a legal challenge from voting rights activists who argued that it could keep tens of thousands of voters from casting a ballot.

The Arizona measure, passed into law on Wednesday, also requires newly registered voters to provide a proof of address, which could have a disproportionate impact on students, older voters who no longer drive, low-income voters and Native Americans.

Legal experts said the new rules might run afoul of both federal law and recent Supreme Court decisions. On Wednesday, Mi Familia Vota, a voting rights group, filed a federal lawsuit challenging the law.

It is the latest sign that the push by Republican lawmakers to tighten voting rules after the 2020 election has not abated. G.O.P. lawmakers in Mississippi, Idaho and other states have also proposed new identification requirements. And legislators in Georgia and Florida have advanced a second round of major changes to election laws.

Arizona Republicans said that the law would shore up election security, although they did not point to any evidence of significant fraud.