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New Hampshire town elections offer a preview of citizenship voting rules being considered nationwide

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) 鈥 A voter in Milford missed out on approving the town鈥檚 $19 million operating budget, electing a cemetery trustee and buying a new dump truck.
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Elodie McCarran, 3, peaks out from a curtain as mother Lauren votes in Derry, N.H., Tuesday, March 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Reba Saldanha)

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) 鈥 A voter in Milford missed out on approving the town鈥檚 $19 million operating budget, electing a cemetery trustee and buying a new dump truck. In Durham, an 18-year-old high school student did not get a say in who should serve on the school board or whether $125,000 should go toward replacing artificial turf on athletic fields.

Neither was able to participate in recent town elections in New Hampshire thanks to a new state law requiring proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote. Their experiences, recounted by town clerks, could prove instructive for the rest of the country as the advances in Congress and more than a dozen states consider similar legislation. On Tuesday, President Donald Trump that would require documentary proof of citizenship to register and vote in federal elections, though it is likely to face swift challenges.

鈥淓verything that conservatives tried to downplay, New Hampshire told us exactly what would happen on a national scale under the SAVE Act,鈥 said Greta Bedekovics, a former policy adviser for Senate Democrats who is now with the Center for American Progress.

Married women with changed names face extra hurdles

Voting rights groups are particularly concerned that married women who have changed their names will encounter trouble when trying to register because their birth certificates list their maiden names.

That is exactly what happened to Brooke Yonge, a 45-year-old hairstylist who showed up at her polling place in Derry last week determined to show her support for public education.

She was turned away initially because she did not have proof of citizenship. When she returned with her birth certificate, that still was not enough because the name on the document did not match the one on her driver鈥檚 license. Back home she went to fetch her marriage license to prove she had changed her name.

鈥淭hird trip around the sun and here we are,鈥 said Yonge, who called the registration requirements reasonable despite the hassle. 鈥淚f I did a little research, I probably would have known that is what I needed.鈥

New Hampshire is among the 20 states that allow voters to register on the day of an election. According to the New Hampshire Campaign for Voting Rights, at least 56 people who tried to register statewide the day of the March 11 town elections were turned away, though it is unknown how many of them later completed the process.

Derry's town clerk, Tina Guilford, wonders how it will go during a November general election, when turnout is much higher.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just heartbreaking to me to see people turn around and think, 鈥業 hope they come back,鈥欌 she said.

At least one person who tried to register in Milford on Tuesday did not return, said Joan Dargie, the town clerk. Neither did an older woman who tried to register at Town Hall before the election. The first of the woman鈥檚 three marriages was in Florida in the 1970s and that license was long gone, Dargie said.

鈥淪ometimes people are like, 鈥業 didn鈥檛 save any paperwork for that. I wanted to forget all that,鈥欌 Dargie said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 disenfranchising women.鈥

What's happening at the national level

The U.S. House passed last year to require proof of citizenship for voter registration, but it stalled in the Senate amid Democratic opposition. With Republicans now in full control of Congress, the House is expected to take up the issue again soon.

Before the 2024 election, Trump that noncitizens in large enough numbers to . His Tuesday executive order signals that he didn鈥檛 want to wait for Congress to act. It directs federal agencies to share data that could help election officials identify noncitizens on their rolls and threatens to pull federal funding from states that don't comply.

Republicans argue that even small numbers of noncitizens voting undermine public confidence, but voting rights groups say requiring proof of citizenship could disenfranchise millions of Americans who don't have ready access to those documents. Research and have shown voting by noncitizens and typically a mistake rather than an intentional effort to subvert an election.

New Hampshire's new law also has had broad support. About 8 in 10 New Hampshire voters in the 2024 election favored requiring people in their state to show a passport, birth certificate or other evidence of U.S. citizenship when they register to vote, according to AP VoteCast, including about 6 in 10 who were strongly in favor. The vast majority of Trump voters were in support of the requirement, but so were more than half of voters for Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in the race against Republican Trump.

During the recent town hall elections, Michael Appleton had to return home to get his birth certificate and provide proof of a name change before he could register and vote. Even so, he wasn't critical of the new law.

鈥淚t鈥檚 inconvenient for me personally in this moment, but I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 an unreasonable thing to ask,鈥 he said.

Republican state Rep. Bob Lynn, who sponsored New Hampshire鈥檚 law, does not believe there is rampant voter fraud in the state. He also does not believe the new citizenship requirements are unduly burdensome.

鈥淚t seems to me that voting is pretty important, and it鈥檚 not unreasonable to say to people, look, you鈥檙e going to have to give a little bit of forethought to what you need in order to vote,鈥 said Lynn, a former chief justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court.

Other states also are taking action

New Hampshire is one of eight states with laws that require documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote, and similar legislation is pending in 17 states, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

The experience has at times been fraught in some states that have enacted a proof-of-citizenship requirement.

In Arizona, a recent state audit found that problems with the way data was handled had affected the tracking and verification of citizenship. It came after officials had who were thought to have provided citizenship, but had not.

A proof of citizenship requirement was in effect for three years before it was overturned through legal challenges. The state鈥檚 own expert estimated that almost all the roughly 30,000 people who were prevented from registering to vote during the time it was in effect were U.S. citizens who had been eligible to vote.

In Texas, where Republicans control both houses of the Legislature, lawmakers have introduced a bill that would in some ways expand on the proposed federal SAVE Act. It would require proof of citizenship for voter registration and compel state and local election officials to verify the citizenship status of everyone who is already registered.

If a person鈥檚 citizenship cannot be verified, that person would be notified and allowed to vote in only congressional elections.

Further changes possible in New Hampshire

Even as New Hampshire's law faces legal challenges, state lawmakers are considering further changes.

The state House gave preliminary approval last week to a bill that would create vouchers to cover the cost for indigent voters of obtaining a birth certificate, though opponents said asking voters to declare themselves poor would be demeaning. It also would instruct the secretary of state to make 鈥渞easonable efforts鈥 to verify citizenship if someone is unable to provide documentation. Critics noted the office has access only to birth certificates issued in New Hampshire.

鈥淚f you're going to pass a bill, make sure that it can withstand litigation and make sure that it offers real solutions. This bill does neither,鈥 Democratic Rep. Connie Lane said.

In Durham, where voting takes place in the town鈥檚 high school, students enrolled in civics classes traditionally watch the process. They got an extra lesson during the recent town hall elections. A student who was old enough to vote wanted to register but did not have the documents to prove citizenship, according to Rachel Deane, the town clerk.

鈥淭he supervisors of the voter checklist are wonderful in Durham, and they walked the student through the process and encouraged them to come back," she said.

Deane said she believes the student never did return.

___

Casey reported from Derry, New Hampshire, and Cassidy from Atlanta. Associated Press Polling Director Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux in Washington contributed to this report.

Holly Ramer, Michael Casey And Christina A. Cassidy, The Associated Press

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