Arizona To Remove Up to 50,000 Noncitizens From Voter Rolls

Arizona just made major changes to safeguard the state’s election integrity against something that supposedly never happens according to liberals.
Arizona has removed approximately 50,000 noncitizens from its voter registration rolls following a legal challenge, state officials confirmed.
The action was spurred by a lawsuit from America First Legal, which has reignited debates over voter eligibility and election security in the battleground state.
The lawsuit, filed earlier this year, alleged that Arizona’s voter registration system failed to adequately verify citizenship status, allowing noncitizens to remain on the rolls. The group behind the suit, which has pushed for stricter election laws nationwide, pointed to discrepancies in voter records as evidence of systemic flaws. After months of legal back-and-forth, the Arizona Secretary of State’s office agreed to review the rolls and act on the findings.
According to state officials, the 50,000 individuals removed were flagged due to missing or invalid proof of U.S. citizenship, such as inconsistencies in driver’s license records or other documentation.