MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This lawsuit challenges the Kansas documentary proof of citizenship requirement as it applies to those who apply to register to vote in federal elections during the driver’s license application or renewal process. The individual plaintiffs filed their Complaint on February 18, 2016, on -behalf of themselves and others similarly situated, against Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, and Kansas Secretary of Revenue Nick Jordan. The Complaint alleges that the Kansas documentary proof of citizenship requirement and a related regulation are preempted by the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, and violate 42 U.S.C. § 1983 because they are unconstitutional under the Elections Clause and Privileges and Immunities Clause of the United States. Constitution.
The Court allowed the parties to conduct limited, expedited discovery, and heard evidence and argument on the motion on
1. Background
In 1993, Congress passed the National Voter Registration Act (“NVRA”)] The NVRA has four stated purposes:
(1) to establish procedures that will increase the number of eligible citizens who register to vote in elections for Federal office;
(2) to make it possible for Federal, State, and local governments, to implement this chapter in a manner that enhances the participation of eligible citizens as voters in elections for Federal office;
(3) to protect the integrity of the electoral process; and
(4) to ensure that accurate and current voter registration rolls are maintained.2
The NVRA seeks to achieve these objectives by creating national registration requirements for federal elections through three methods: simultaneously with a driver’s license application (“motor-voter”), by mail using the- federal form approved by the Election Assistance Commission (“EAC”), or in person.
Section 5 of the NVRA requires that every application for a driver’s license, in-eluding license renewals, “shall serve as an application for .voter registration with, respect to elections for Federal office.”
(1) Each State shall include a voter registration application form for elections for Federal office as part of an application for a State motor vehicle driver’s license.
(2) The voter registration application portion of an application for a State motor vehicle driver’s license—
(A) may not require any information that duplicates information required in the driver’s license portion of the form (other than a second signature or other information necessary under subpara-graph (Q);
(B) may require only the minimum amount of information necessary to—
(i) prevent duplicate voter registrations; and
(ii) enable State election officials to assess the eligibility of the applicant and to administer voter registration and other parts of the election process;
(C) shall include a statement that—
(i) states each eligibility requirement (including citizenship);
(ii) contains an attestation that the applicant meets each such requirement; and
(iii) requires the signature of the applicant, under penalty of perjury;
(D) shall include, in print that is identical to that used in the attestation portion of the application—
(i) the information required in section 20607(a)(5)(A) and (B) of this title;
(ii) a statement that, if an applicant declines to register to vote, the fact that the applicant has declined to register will remain confidential and will be used only for voter registration purposes; and
*1114 (iii) a statement that if an applicant does register to vote, the office at which the applicant submits a voter registration application will remain confidential and will be used only for voter registration purposes; and
(E) shall be made available (as submitted by the applicant, or in machine readable or other format) to the appropriate State election official as provided by State law.5
Section 8 of the NVRA provides for the administration of voter registration. Under this section, each State shall
(1) ensure that any eligible applicant is registered to vote in an election—
(A)in the case of registration with a motor vehicle application under section 20504 of this title, if the valid voter registration form of the applicant is submitted to the appropriate State motor vehicle authority not later than the lesser of 30 days, or the period provided by State law, before the date of the election.6
Each State shall also:
(3) provide that the name of a registrant may not be removed from the official list of eligible voters except—
(A) at the request of the registrant;
(B) as provided by State law, by reason of criminal conviction or mental incapacity; or
(C)as provided under paragraph (4);
(4) conduct a general program that makes a reasonable effort to remove the names of ineligible voters from the official lists of eligible voters by reason of—
(A) the death of the registrant; or
(B) a change in the residence of the registrant, in accordance with subsections (b), (c), and (d).7
The NVRA was passed after the House and Senate each passed voter registration bills and proceeded to conference committee. The Senate’s bill contained several Republican-proposed amendments, referred to as a “core” package of amendments that allowed the bill to pass the Senate.
It is not necessary or consistent with the purposes of this Act, Furthermore, there is concern that it could be interpreted by States to permit registration requirements that could effectively eliminate, or seriously interfere with, the mail registration program of the Act. It could also adversely affect the administration of the other registration programs as well. In addition, it creates confusion with regard to the relationship of this Act to the Voting Rights Act. Except for this provision, this Act has been carefully drafted to assure that it would not supersede, restrict or limit the application of the Voting Rights Act. These concerns lead the conferees to conclude that this section should be deleted.12
When submitting the conference committee report on the Senate floor, Senator Ford discussed the amendment. After citing the same concerns raised in the report, he stated:
Mr. President, every State mandates that you must be a citizen of the United States to be eligible to vote. This bill requires that, on every application for registration, the requirements for eligibility must be clearly set forth, including citizenship. And every applicant signs a statement that they meet each and every requirement, and that statement is signed under penalty of perjury.13
The NVRA was ultimately passed without the proposed rule of construction amendment.
In 2007, Kansas amended its driver’s license statute to require all applicants to provide documentary proof of lawful presence.
shall require valid documentary evidence that the applicant: (A) Is a citizen or national of the United States; (B) is an alien lawfully admitted for permanent or temporary residence in the United States; (C) has conditional permanent resident status in the United States; (D) has an approved application for asylum in the United States or has entered into the United States in refugee status; (E) has a valid, unexpired nonimmigrant visa or nonimmigrant visa status for entry into the United States; (F) has a pending application for asylum in the United States; (G) has a pending or approved application for temporary protected status in the United States; (H) has approved deferred action status; or (I) has a pending application for adjustment of status to that of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence in the United States or conditional permanent resident status in the United States.15
Under Kansas law, only United States citizens are eligible to register to vote.
(Z) The county election officer or secretary of state’s office shall accept any completed application for registration, but an applicant shall not be registered until the applicant has provided satisfactory evidence of United States citizenship. Evidence of United States citizenship as required in this section will be satisfied by presenting one of the documents listed in paragraphs (1) through (13) of subsection (l) in person at the time of filing the application for registration or by including a photocopy of one of the following documents with a mailed registration application. After a person has submitted satisfactory evidence of citizenship, the county election officer shall indicate this information in the person’s permanent voter file. Evidence of United States citizenship shall be satisfied by providing one of the following, or a legible photocopy of one of the following documents:
(1) The applicant’s driver’s license or nondriver’s identification card issued by the division of vehicles or the equivalent governmental agency of another state within the United States if the agency indicates on the applicant’s driver’s license or nondriver’s identification card that the person has provided satisfactory proof of United States citizenship;
(2) the applicant’s birth certificate that verifies United States citizenship to the satisfaction of the county election officer or secretary of state;
(3) pertinent pages of the applicant’s United States valid or expired passport identifying the applicant and the applicant’s passport number, or presentation to the county election officer of the applicant’s United States passport;
(4) the applicant’s United States naturalization documents or the number of the certificate of naturalization. If only the number of the certificate of naturalization is provided, the applicant shall not be included in the registration rolls until the number of the certificate of naturalization is verified with the United States bureau of citizenship and immigration services by the county election officer or the secretary of state, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1373(c);
(5) other documents or methods of proof of United States citizenship issued by the federal government pursuant to the immigration and nationality act of 1952, and amendments thereto;
(6) the applicant’s bureau of Indian affairs card number, tribal treaty card number or tribal enrollment number;
(7) the applicant’s consular report of birth abroad of a citizen of the United States of America;
(8) the applicant’s certificate of citizenship issued by the United States citizenship and immigration services;
(9) the applicant’s certification of report of birth issued by the United States department of state;
(10) the applicant’s American Indian card, with KIC classification, issued by the United States department of homeland security;
(11) the applicant’s final adoption decree showing the applicant’s name and United States birthplace;
(12) the applicant’s official United States military record of service showing the applicant’s place of birth in the United States; or
(13) an extract from a United States hospital record of birth created at the time of the applicant’s birth indicating the applicant’s place of birth in the United States.18
If an applicant is a United States citizen but unable to provide one of the thirteen forms of identification listed in subsection (l), the statute allows that applicant' to submit another form of citizenship documentation by directly contacting the Secretary of State’s Office. In these cases, the state election board shall give-the applicant an opportunity for a hearing before assessing the evidence of citizenship to determine whether it is satisfactory.
[H]e can also make the allegation himself, too. He can file his own declaration .... I would be willing to bet that the State Election Board would take simply his own declaration as sufficient. The State Election Board has yet to tell anyone no. And that’s perfectly fine if a person is willing to make an attestation, a declaration to the State Election Board, “Here are my circumstances, here’s why I don’t have my document.”23
The evidence submitted at the hearing on this matter shows that prior to the effective date of the SAFE Act, eleven noncitizens successfully registered to vote in Sedgwick County.
Plaintiffs offered the expert testimony of Dr. Lorraine Minnite to controvert Secretary Kobach’s argument that there is a widespread problem of noncitizen voter fraud in Kansas. Dr. Minnite is an
More than 50 employees of the Guyman, Oklahoma, hog processing plant sent in voter registration applications in a single envelope addressed to the county clerk’s office in Seward County, Kansas. Many of the registration forms contained made-up addresses in Seward County. However, the clerk had no legal authority to reject the registration applications.31
Secretary Kobach then told the House Subcommittee that these Oklahoma workers were bussed in to Seward County on Election Day to vote. “The county clerk strongly believed that the registrants were non-citizens.”
Mr. Caskey testified at the hearing, and submitted a lengthy declaration documenting the administration of motor-voter registration in Kansas.
Mr. Caskey describes the relationship between the Department of Revenue and the Secretary of State’s Office as follows:
The Secretary of State’s Office and the DMV have established an interagency practice whereby the DMV sends verification of documentary proof of citizenship to the relevant county election official. In instances where it is learned that the DMV has failed to forward such information to the county election official, the Secretary of State’s Office obtains the relevant documentation from the DMV and instructs the county election officer to complete the registration of the individual.35
But the evidence at the hearing establishes that the DMV clerks do not request DPOC from driver’s license renewal applicants. They request proof of lawful presence for initial applicants only, which often constitutes proof of citizenship. When this documentation is provided by initial applicants, the DMV clerk makes an annotation in the DMV database about the type of documentation provided by the applicant. But the Department of Revenue has made a policy decision not to request DPOC from renewal applicants, claiming it lacks the administrative capacity to undertake that effort.
At the end of the motor voter application process, the applicants sign a digital form that includes the NVRA-required attestation clause that what they are signing is true and correct, and that they are a United States citizen. Once that is complete, the applicants are handed a receipt that apparently includes a statement about the DPOC requirement and that instructs the applicants that if they have not already provided proof of citizenship, they must do so before they will be registered.
The DMV database information about each voter registration application is uploaded nightly in batch format into the state-wide ELVIS system, which then disseminates the information to the 105 county election offices based on the applicant’s address.. For each voter registration application, there is electronic data, and a separate certification from the DMV stating whether acceptable DPOC was provided to the DMV at the time of registration. Once the county election official opens the batch, the county begins creating individual records.
If an applicant has not provided DPOC, or if the application is otherwise missing required information, the record is designated as “in suspense” or “incomplete” in the ELVIS system until the applicant provides the remaining information. Secretary Kobach promulgated K.A.R. § 7-23-15 to become effective on October 2, 2015. The
The county election offices populate the ELVIS system with new registration records, and maintain records of the notices sent to applicants deemed incomplete for failure to provide DPOC or for some other reason. The first mailed notice is sent within one or two weeks of application. The counties are advised to send out a third notice after about thirty days, and a fourth notice before cancellation. Thus, the counties have been instructed by the Secretary of State’s Office to send three written notices and to make one telephone call to applicants on the incomplete list before cancelling their applications.
A person who receives notice of an incomplete voter registration application due to failure to provide DPOC can provide their DPOC in person at the county election office for inspection, by mailing a copy of the document to the county election officer or to the Secretary of State’s Office, or by faxing, emailing, and in some counties, texting a copy of the documents. In addition, the Secretary of State’s office checks approximately monthly with the Kansas Department of Vital Statistics (“KDHE”) to see if individuals missing DPOC were born in the State of Kansas, and will complete those registrations if so. Almost half of the voter registration applications on the suspense list have had citizenship confirmed through these monthly checks; many others submit their DPOC after receiving notice.
If information is provided to the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office suggesting that an initial applicant presented DPOC to the DMV at the time of application, but that information was not conveyed into the ELVIS system, Mr. Caskey will confirm whether or not the DMV has in its possession a proof of citizenship record for the applicant. Given the DMV policy not to request DPOC for renewal applicants, this confirmation process would never occur with renewal applicants. Also, Mr. Caskey avers that the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office contacts other States to verify that a birth certificate exists confirming citizenship, and contacts voters by telephone or in person to determine eligibility.
Many registered voters in Kansas have registered to vote at DMV offices — between January 1, 2006 and' March 23, 2016, 43.7% of Kansas voters registered at a DMV office. The individual Plaintiffs and the proposed class they represent are Kansas residents and citizens who are “motor-voter registrants”: that is, they submitted voter registration applications at DMV offices in Kansas. These Plaintiffs were not registered to vote because they failed to meet' the documentary pi’oof-of-citizenship requirement imposed under K.S.A. § 25 — 2309(¿). Some of these voters’ applications are considered “in suspense” in the ELVIS system, while others have been cancelled under K.A.R. § 7-23-15.
Plaintiff Steven Wayne Fish is a United States citizen who currently resides in Lawrence, Kansas. He first moved to Kansas as a young person, obtaining his first Kansas driver’s license in 1995. He has continuously possessed a Kansas driver’s license since then. On August 21, 2014, Mr. Fish went to the driver’s license office in Lawrence to renew his driver’s license. The DMV clerk asked him at that time if he wanted to register to vote. He had never registered before, but decided to register at this time. The clerk did not ask Mr. Fish for DPOC and did not tell Mr. Fish that Kansas law requires DPOC. Soon after applying to register, on August 27,2014, Fish received a postcard from the Douglas County, Kansas County Clerk, informing him that his name had not been entered onto the voter rolls and that he needed to submit DPOC in order to complete the registration process. Mr. Fish searched his records but could not find any documents that would be sufficient to prove his citizenship under § 25-2309(l). Mr. Fish was born on an Air Force Base in Chanute, Kansas thát was decommissioned and closed in 1993; at the time he received notice of his incomplete registration, he did not know how to obtain a copy of his birth certificate. Mr. Fish has a modest income and could not afford to obtain a copy of his birth certificate. He was unable to vote in the 2014 election. Mr. Fish’s original affidavit stated that his application was in suspense, but the ELVIS records appear to show that his application was cancelled. On May 11, 2016, Mr. Fish submitted a supplemental declaration attesting that he recently found his birth certificate in a safe in his stepfather’s house.
Plaintiff Donna Bucci is a United States citizen who currently resides in Wichita, Kansas. She has lived in Kansas for about five years. On August 14, 2013, Ms. Bucci went to the driver’s license office in Wichita, Kansas to renew her driver’s license. The DMV clerk asked her at that time if she wanted to register to vote. Bucci wanted to register in order to vote in the next election cycle. The clerk did not ask Ms. Bucci for DPOC and did not tell Ms. Bucci that Kansas law requires DPOC. Ms. Bucci left the driver’s license office believing that she had successfully registered to vote. Ms. Bucci states in her declaration that she did not learn that she was not registered to vote until six or seven months later when she received a notice in the mail telling her that she needed to show proof of citizenship in order to be a registered voter. The ELVIS records show that Ms. Bucci was sent two notifications that proof of citizenship was required — the first on August 16, 2013, and a “final notice” on September 28, 2015. There is also a notation in the database from September 25, 2013: “Will get information to us on POC when she gets items unpacked.”
Plaintiff William Strieker, III is a United States citizen who currently resides in Wichita, Kansas. Mr. Strieker was a Kansas resident from 2006-08, resided in Chicago from 2008-13, and moved back to Kansas in 2013. He previously voted in the 2010 and 2012 mid-term and Presidential elections. Mr. Strieker went to the DMV office in October 2014 to obtain a driver’s license and register to vote. He was told that he had insufficient documentation to obtain a driver’s license and was sent home to obtain his social security card.
Plaintiff Thomas Boynton is a United States citizen who currently resides in Wichita, Kansas. He first moved to Kansas in July 2014. In early August 2014, Mr. Boynton went to a driver’s license office in Wichita, Kansas to exchange a valid out-of-state driver’s license for a Kansas license, and to register to vote. The DMV clerk asked him at that time if he wanted to register to vote, and he said yes. Mr. Boynton brought several documents with him to the DMV office that day: his out-of-state license, social security card, original birth certificate, utility bill, bank statement, and house lease. He does not recall which of these documents the DMV clerk asked to see, but he provided the clerk with each document as she requested it. He left the DMV believing he was registered to vote. On Election Day in November 2014, Mr. Boynton went to his polling place to vote but the poll volunteer did not find him on the voter roll. The volunteer told Mr. Boynton that this was common and told him he could cast a provisional ballot instead that would be counted once his voter registration was validated. Mr. Boynton cast a provisional ballot and assumed it would be counted. In early 2015, Mr. Boynton received a notice from the Sedgwick County Board of Elections informing him that he needed to provide DPOC in order to register to vote.
Other than the cases of Mr. Strieker and Mr. Boynton, there is no evidence that
The ELVIS database shows no record of Mr, Boynton applying to register at a DMV office in August 2014. The database shows that Mr. Boynton tried to register in person at his polling station on November 4, 2014, Election Day. He was sent two written notices that proof of citizenship was required on December 5, 2014, and on September 28, 2015. There is also a record that he was called regarding his suspense status on February 27, 2015. His voter registration application was cancelled on November 5, 2015 pursuant to K.A.R. § 7-23-15.
Plaintiff Douglas Hutchinson is a United States citizen who currently resides in Mission, Kansas. He has lived in Kansas since infancy. He first obtained a Kansas driver’s license in the mid-1980’s and has continuously possessed a Kansas driver’s license since then. Mr. Hutchinson first registered to vote in 1987, but stopped voting many years ago. About two years ago, he decided he wanted to vote again, Mr. Hutchinson went to the DMV office in Mission, Kansas in the spring of 2013 to renew his license and told the clerk he wished to register to vote. The DMV clerk did not require him to provide DPOC. In late 2014 or early 2015, he received a telephone call from a volunteer with the League of Women Voters advising him that his name was not registered to vote because he had not provided DPOC. He attests that he never received prior notice from any government office advising him that his registration was incomplete. Mr. Hutchinson obtained a passport, and in the summer of 2015 attempted to take a copy of his passport to the DMV office. The clerk at the DMV office told him that he had done all that was necessary to complete his voter registration.
Between January 1, 2013 and March 28, 2016, there were 244,699 voter registration applications completed in Kansas. According to Plaintiffs’ expert analysis of the ELVIS data, between January 1, 2013 and March 23, 2016, there were 12,717 motor voter registration applications cancelled under K.A.R, § 7-23-15 for failure to provide DPOC.
Kansas’s voter participation rate in the November 2012 presidential election was 66.8%; in the 2014 midterm election it was 50.8%. Kansas was one of fourteen states that increased voter turnout from 2010 to 2014. The next statewide election is the primary election of August 2, 2016. Advanced voting for this election begins on July 13, 2016. This ballot will include federal, state, county, township, and precinct offices. The registration deadline for this election is twenty-one days prior to election day; however, DPOC may be provided by an applicant on the suspense list up to one day before the election, August 1, 2016.
Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint alleges claims under: (1) NVRA § 5 because it preempts the Kansas DPOC law; (2) NVRA § 8 because Defendants fail to ensure that voter registration applicants who completed and submitted a valid voter registration form with their driver’s license application are registered to vote; (3) NVRA § 8 because the regulation allowing applicants to be cancelled in the ELVIS system removes otherwise eligible voters from the voting rolls; (4) NVRA § 10 for failure to coordinate the State’s responsibilities under the Act;' (5) 42 U.S.C. § 1983, based on violations of the Elections Clause in Article I, § 4, cl. 1; and (6) 42 U.S.C. § 1983, based on violations of the Privileges and Immunities Clauses. Plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment that the DPOC law and K.AR. § 7-23-15 are invalid with respect to motor-voter registrants, and preempted by the NVRA. They also seek injunctive relief that: requires Defendants to register for federal elections Plaintiffs and all similarly situated motor voter registrants who are otherwise eligible to vote but have been either cancelled or held in suspense due to the DPOC law; enjoins Defendants from enforcing the DPOC law and K.A.R. § 7-23-15 with respect to motor, voter registrants who are otherwise eligible to vote in federal elections; and that orders Defendants to verify DPOC on file with other state agencies in the same manner as they work with the KDHE to confirm citizenship of suspended voters. Plaintiffs seek attorneys’ fees and costs.
In their motion for preliminary injunc-tive relief, Plaintiffs ask the Court to require the Secretary of State to identify and register all otherwise eligible voters on the incomplete and cancellation lists in ELVIS for federal elections, and to enjoin Defendants from enforcing K.S.A. § 25 — 2309(¿) and K.A.R. § 7-23-15, until the case can be determined on the merits.
II. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Defendants each raise subject matter jurisdiction challenges in their responses to the motion for preliminary injunction. Secretary Jordan challenges subject matter jurisdiction based on: (1) lack of standing; and (2) Eleventh Amendment immunity. Secretary Kobach argues that Plaintiffs lack standing to raise the duplication of information component of the § 5 violation in Count I because no named plaintiff has alleged injury associated with that claim. Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and, as such, must have a statutory or constitutional basis to exercise jurisdiction.
A. Eleventh Amendment Immunity
Secretary Jordan first argues that the claims against him are barred under the doctrine of sovereign immunity. Under the Eleventh Amendment, States and State agencies are immune from private suits unless they consent to suit, or Congress validly abrogates the States’ immunity.
Secretary Jordan argues that Ex parte Young does not apply to him because his agency does not enforce- the NVRA, citing cases where the exception did not apply to a defendant without the power to enforce the law in question. These cases are easily distinguishable. In Peterson v. Martinez, the Tenth Circuit explained that the State official “must have some connection with the enforcement of the act, or else it is merely making him a party as a representative of the state, and thereby attempting to make the state a party,”
The NVRA provision at issue in this case addresses motor voter registration only, requiring a simultaneous application process for registering to vote when applying for or renewing a driver’s license.
B. Standing
Article III of the Constitution gives federal courts the power to exercise jurisdiction only over “Cases” and “Controversies.” As the Supreme Court has explained, “[i]n limiting the judicial power to
One of several doctrines reflecting Article Ill’s case-or-controversy limitation on the judicial power is the doctrine of standing. That doctrine requires fpderal courts, before considering the merits of an action, to “satisfy themselves that ‘the plaintiff has alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy as to warrant [the plaintiffs] invocation of federal-court jurisdiction.’ ”
Plaintiff, as the party invoking federal jurisdiction, bears the burden of establishing each element of standing “with the manner and degree of evidence required at the successive stages of the litigation.”
The Supreme Court has found the “irreducible constitutional minimum of standing” to contain three elements:
First, the plaintiff must have suffered an “injury in fact” — an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical. Second, there must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of — the injury has to be “fairly ... trace[able] to the challenged action of the defendant, and not ... th[e] result of the independent action of some third party not before the court.” Third, it must be “likely,” as opposed to merely “speculative,” that the injury will be “redressed by a favorable decision.”79
To establish standing for prospective in-junctive relief, “a plaintiff must be suffering a continuing injury or be under a real and immediate threat of being injured in the future.”
1. Secretary Jordan
Secretary Jordan argues that Plaintiffs lack standing to challenge any action taken by the Department of Revenue in this case because their claims are not redressable by his agency. This argument is similar to his immunity argu
2. Section 5 Duplication Claim
Under § 5(c)(2)(A),' the voter registration portion of the simultaneous motor voter application “may not require any information that duplicates information required in the driver’s license portion of the form (other than á second signature or other information necessary under subpar-agraph (C)).”
The Court agrees with Plaintiffs that they have standing to raise the duplication claim. Kansas law explicitly provides that it may require duplicate . information on each portion of the application, which Plaintiffs argue is in direct conflict with the NVRA provision prohibiting such. Because Plaintiffs claim that Kansas law requires every initial and renewal applicant to provide proof of lawful presence, which is the same for United States citizens as the DPOC required on the voter applica
C. Notice to Secretary Jordan under the NVRA
The NVRA requires a person aggrieved by the- Act - to “provide written notice of the violation to the chief election official of the State involved.”
III. Preliminary Injunction Standard
“A plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction must establish that he is likely to succeed on the merits, that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary relief, that the balance of equities tips in his favor, and that an injunction is in the public interest.”
The three types of disfavored injunctions are “(1) preliminary injunctions that alter the status quo; (2) mandatory preliminary injunctions; and (3) preliminary injunctions that afford the movant all the relief that it could -recover at the conclusion of a full trial on the merits.” When a preliminary injunction falls into one of these categories, it “must be more closely scrutinized to assure that the*1130 exigencies of the case support the granting of a remedy that is extraordinary even in the normal course.” A district court may not grant a preliminary injunction unless the moving party “make[s] a strong showing both with regard to the likelihood of success on the merits and with regard to the balance of harms.”88
The parties dispute whether the requested preliminary injunction is a disfavored injunction, requiring application of the heightened standard. Defendants argue that the injunction would alter the status quo — enforcement of the SAFE Act and regulation — and that it would require both agencies to take specific action. Defendants also suggest that the requested injunction would provide all of the relief sought by Plaintiffs in their Amended Complaint. Plaintiffs disagree, arguing that they do not seek a disfavored injunction because they seek merely to preserve the status quo before the law went into effect, that the injunction would not require Defendants to act affirmatively, and that the relief sought in this case exceeds what is sought by the preliminary injunction because the First Amended Complaint seeks declaratory relief and a permanent injunction as to the law.
The Court need not resolve this dispute because, as described in this opinion, under the heightened standard, Plaintiffs have made a strong showing on both likelihood of success on the merits, and on the balance of harms as to their § 5 claim.
IV. Preliminary Injunction Analysis
A. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
1. Section 5 of the NVRA
Plaintiffs allege that the SAFE Act violates § 5 of the NVRA in two ways: (1) it demands more than the “minimum amount of information necessary” to assess an applicant’s citizenship eligibility; and (2) it duplicates the proof of lawful presence documentation required by the driver’s license portion of the application.
a. Minimum Amount of Information Necessary to Enable State Election Officials to Assess the Eligibility of the Applicant and to Administer Voter Registration
The word “minimum” is not defined in the NVRA. Plaintiffs urge that the minimum amount of information necessary to assess United States citizenship eligibility is defined by subsection (a)(2)(C), which requires that the registration application include an attestation, signed under penalty of perjury, that the applicant meets each eligibility requirement, including citizenship. Plaintiffs argue that the plain meaning of the statute, coupled with Congress’ failure to include the Simpson Amendment in the final bill, supports this interpretation. Plaintiffs further argue that the Supreme Court’s decision in Arizona v. InterTribal Council of Arizona, Inc. (ITCA),
The Court must begin its analysis with the plain language of the statute, reading “the words of the statute in their context and with a view to their place in the overall statutory scheme.”
Plaintiffs urge that the term “minimum” in § 5(c)(2)(B) has an ordinary meaning that is readily understood. The Court agrees. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “minimum” as: “Of, relating to, or constituting the smallest acceptable or possible quantity in a given case.”
The mail voter registration form developed under subsection (a)(2) — (1) may require only such identifying information (including the signature of the applicant) and: other information (including data relating to previous registration by the applicant), as is necessary to enable the appropriate State election official to assess the eligibility of the applicant and to administer voter registration and other parts of the election process ....98
In contrast, the motor voter provision is that a state “may require only the minimum amount of information necessary to ... enable State election officials to assess the eligibility, of the applicant.”
Secretary Kobaeh does not argue that the term “minimum” is susceptible to more than one meaning. Instead, he urges the Court to focus on the phrase “necessary to enable State election officials to assess the eligibility of the applicant” in § 5, and claims that State election officials may require any information they deem necessary to assess citizenship eligibility. While the “necessary” phrase is identical in §§ 5 and 9 of the NVRA, in both sections it is preceded by words that must be given some meaning; the word “minimum” appears in § 5, but not in § 9, which suggests that Congress intended for a stricter standard to apply in § 5. “It is a cardinal principle of statutory construction that if it can be prevented, no clause, sentence, or word shall be superfluous, void, or insignificant.”
The plain meaning of a statute should be given meaning unless it “will produce a result demonstrably at odds with the intentions of its drafters.”
Secretary Kobaeh argues that his interpretation of § 5, that the States have wide discretion to determine how to enforce eligibility requirements, is mandated by the
In saying this, we recognize that the NVRA imposes certain mandates on States, describing those mandates in detail. The NVRA says, for example, that the state driver’s license applications must also serve as voter registration applications and that a decision not to register will remain confidential. It says that States cannot force driver’s license applications to submit the same information twice (on license applications and again on registration forms). Nonetheless, implementation of the NVRA is not purely ministerial. The NVRA still leaves room for policy choice. The NVRA does not list, for example, all the other information the State may — or may not — provide or request. And a de-cisión about that other information — say, whether or not to tell the applicant that registration counts only for federal elections — makes Mississippi’s changes to ■the New System the kind of discretionary, nonministerial changes that call for federal VRA review. Hence, Mississippi must preclear those changes.108
The Court does not read Young as broadly as Secretary Kobach. Although it is certainly true that implementation of the NVRA is not ministerial and that it involves some policy choice, the Court in Young did not say that the States have unfettered discretion under the NVRA to request information in conjunction with a motor voter registration application. Instead, Young. observed that the NVRA imposes certain mandates on.the States. Indeed, § 5 of the NVRA specifically addresses several items that the-State may and may not require on the motor voter registration application. One of those provisions is directly at issue in this case — the meaning of “may require only the minimum amount of information necessary to ... enable State election officials to assess the eligibility of the applicant.”
Likewise, the Court does not find reasonable Secretary Kobach’s reading of Young and § 5 as placing no ceiling on information a State may require, so long as it is in addition to the application form itself. The statute refers to “[t]he voter registration application portion of an application for a State motor vehicle driver’s license.”
b. Whether the Kansas DPOC Law Constitutes the “Minimum” Amount of Information Necessary for State Election Officials to Assess Citizenship Eligibility
Having determined that the word “minimum” in the NVRA should be given its ordinary meaning of “least possible” to quantify the information necessary for State election officials to assess an applicant’s citizenship eligibility, the Court must determine whether the Kansas DPOC law conflicts with this NVRA mandate, and if so whether the NVRA preempts. The NVRA requires each motor voter application to include a list of the eligibility requirements, including citizenship, and an attestation that the applicant meets each requirement.
First, Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that the process of submitting DPOC for motor voter applicants is burdensome, confusing, and inconsistently enforced. The law provides for thirteen forms of acceptable identification to show citizenship, including a birth certificate or passport. In practice, an applicant is only required to submit proof of lawful presence for new driver’s license applications. Usually, proof of lawful presence for citizens who apply for a new driver’s license will suffice as DPOC on the voter registration application.
Therefore, a person who applies to register to vote at a Kansas DMV office will have a different application process depending on whether they are renewing their driver’s license, or applying for a new license, which is illustrated by several of the named Plaintiffs’ experiences. Ms. Bucci and Mr. Hutchinson both applied for renewal driver’s licenses and were asked if they wanted to register to vote. Both Plaintiffs said “yes,” and believed they had completed the application process. Mr. Hutchinson learned about the DPOC law after he attempted to register at the DMV without DPOC; he then tried to return to the DMV and provide his passport. He was told by the DMV clerk that he had successfully registered when in fact he was on the suspense list. In contrast, those applying for new licenses are required to provide proof of lawful presence. Mr. Stricker’s experience underscores how confusing this process is. He went home to retrieve a social security card because he did not bring sufficient proof of lawful presence with him. Again, he told the DMV clerk that he wanted to register to vote and was not advised that he lacked the necessary documentation to complete that process. He left the DMV believing that he was registered and unsuccessfully attempted to vote in the November 2014 election.
The named Plaintiffs’ experiences also illustrate the difficulty faced by citizens in obtaining the proof of citizenship documents itemized in K.S.A. § 25-2309(i). Lost birth certificates are difficult to obtain and often cost a not-insignifieant amount of money to replace, as Ms. Bucci and Mr. Fish attest. Passports involve a lengthy application process, as evidenced by Mr. Hutchinson’s experience applying for a passport upon learning of his suspense status, and then several months later attempting to provide that passport to the DMV. It is true that the Supreme Court in Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, concluded that “the inconvenience of making a trip to the [D]MV, gathering the required documents, and posing for a photograph surely does not qualify as a substantial burden on the right to vote, or even represent a significant increase over the usual burdens of voting.”
Mr. Caskey and Mr. Kobach referred to standard guidelines the Secretary of State’s Office has established for counties to provide notice to applicants on the suspense list that they must submit DPOC. The counties have been trained to send three written notices, and ideally contact the applicant by phone, before cancelling the application under K.A.R. § 7-23-15. Mr. Caskey testified that the first notice should be sent immediately after the county processes the application record, and that another notice should be sent thirty days later. He said a final notice should be sent before cancellation. But the ELVIS records do not show consistent application of these noticing efforts. Mr. Fish’s ELVIS records show that a single notice was sent to him by Douglas County within a week of applying to register. He was can-celled more than two years later and there is no evidence that a final notice was sent to him. Ms. Bucci was sent two notices by Sedgwick County almost two years apart, with notes about one phone call the month after the first notice was sent in August 2013. Mr. Strieker was sent three notices over the course of eleven months by Sedg-wick County, and election officials made one attempt to call him about his suspense status. Mr. Boynton received two notices over a ten month period of time from Sedgwick County and election officials attempted one phone call. Mr. Hutchinson appears to have been sent two notices from Johnson County, more than two years apart, before his application was cancelled. Importantly, the ELVIS records show only notations that these notices were sent. There is no evidence in the record that they were actually received. Plaintiffs’ declarations assert that many of these notices were not received. Some Plaintiffs admit to receiving one notice, but others did not learn that they were not registered until they either attempted to vote, or received notice of their suspense status from a third party. '
The sheer number of people cancelled or held in suspense because of the DPOC requirement since October 2015 evidences the difficulty of complying with the law as it is currently enforced. Between January 1, 2013 and March 28, 2016, there were 244,699 voter registration applications completed. Defendants assert that between January 1, 2013 and March 23, 2016, there were 16,319 voter registration applications cancelled under K.A.R. § 7-23-15 for failure to provide DPOC. 12,717 of these cancellations were from motor voter applicants. Since K.A.R. § 7-23-15 did not go into effect until October 2015, the cancellation figure actually involves cancellations between October 1, 2015 and March 23, 2016 — over an almost six-month period of time. As of March 28, 2016, there are 5655 motor voter applications that are in “incomplete” status due to failure to provide DPOC. Secretary Kobach touts this figure as a 94% success rate. But 18,372 motor voter applications have been held in suspense or cancelled due to the DPOC law. There is no evidence that these applications are incomplete for any other reason. Therefore, as a direct result of the DPOC law and enforcement scheme, over 18,000 otherwise eligible motor voter applicants in Kansas have been prohibited from registering to vote. Eight percent of all voter registration applications is not an insignificant amount.
When asked at the hearing about the bureaucratic barriers that obtaining DPOC
Second, Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that there is at least one less burdensome alternative to assessing United States citizenship — an attestation along with an applicant’s signature under penalty of perjury. -The NVRA requires that the attestation and signature under penalty of perjury be included on every motor voter application. It also requires that the application include all eligibility requirements, including citizenship. And the State can prosecute noncitizens who register to vote under K.S.A. § 25-2416.
The evidence shows that the DMV clerks currently ask applicants if they are United States citizens, and they check a box if the applicant responds affirmatively. This was the method Kansas used to assess citizenship eligibility prior to the effective date of the SAFE Act in 2013. Between January 1, 2006 (seven years before the DPOC law became effective), and March 23, 2016, 860,604 people registered to vote in the State of Kansas. Between April 16, 2003, and the effective date of the DPOC law in 2013, there is evidence that thirty noncitizens registered to vote, about three noncitizens per year. Of those thirty people, there is evidence that three actually cast votes under the mistaken belief that they were entitled to vote. The evidence submitted by Defendants in support of the 1097 Seward County hog farming referendum incident is insufficient to show that noncitizens actually voted in that referendum. In fact, the only evidence submitted at all is Mr. Caskey’s affidavit referring to the testimony of a witness before the Legislature as it was deliberating over the SAFE Act. There is no direct evidence of her testimony, nor is there any evidence in the Court’s record to support her opinion that noncitizens voted in that election.
Since the effective date of the SAFE Act, there is evidence that fourteen noncit-izens attempted to register to vote in Sedgwick County, Kansas. Defendants submit Tabitha Lehman’s affidavit, who is the Sedgwick County election official charged with maintaining that county’s voter rolls.
Secretary Kobach himself made a strong case that an attestation of United States citizenship is the minimum amount of information necessary for Kansas election officials to assess an applicant’s citizenship.
c. Preemption
The Court determines that because the Kansas DPOC law conflicts with § 5(c)(2)(B) of the NVRA, federal law preempts the Kansas DPOC law under the Elections Clause of the United States Constitution as to registrations for federal elections. The Court further determines that the NVRA motor voter application requirements do not run afoul of the States’ right to establish voting qualifications for federal office. Under the Elections Clause, Congress may preempt state laws governing “Times, Places and Manner” of holding congressional elections.
Secretary Kobach insists that preemption of the DPOC law would infringe on Kansas’s right under the Qualifications Clause to regulate who may vote in federal elections. Indeed, the Constitution provides that voting qualifications are to be set by the States: “the Electors in each State shall have the Qualifications requisite ' for Electors of the most numerous Branch' of the State Legislature.”
But the Supreme Court in ITCA admitted that the power to establish voting qualifications under the Qualifications Clause would be of little value without the power to enforce them — if a federal law precluded a State from “obtaining the information necessary to enforce its voter qualifications,” “it would raise serious cqnstitutional doubts.”
In Kobach v. U.S. Election Assistance Commission,
The Tenth Circuit explained the differr ence between authority under the Elections Clause and the Qualifications Clause as follows: “the United States has authority under the Elections Clause to set procedural requirements for registering to vote
Here, the substantive qualification is that voters must be United States citizens. Plaintiffs do not dispute the States’ power to set this qualification. The NVRA’s “minimum amount of information necessary” requirement for motor voter registration does not implicate the Qualifications Clause because it does not alter the citizenship qualification set by the State of Kansas, nor does it make it impossible for the State to enforce that qualification.
Secretary Kobach argues that Plaintiffs’ position is unconstitutional because it would allow two sets of electors to exist, one for federal and one for state elections, despite the Qualification Clause’s reference to one set of electors. He argues that it creates an untenable situation where the qualifications are different in Kansas depending on whether an registrant is voting in state or federal elections. First, as described above, there is. no dispute that Kansas has properly deemed United States citizenship a qualification for voter registration. That qualification applies regardless of whether the applicant seeks to vote in federal or state elections. The only difference is that in order to meet that qualification, motor voter applicants would not be required to submit DPOC to be registered- to vote in federal elections, while those who wish to register in state elections would be required • to . submit DPOC.
Second, Secretary Kobach’s argument was considered and rejected by ITCA, as evidenced by Justice Thomas and Justice Alito’s dissents in that ease. Justice Thomas disputed the majority’s holding that the Elections Clause provides Congress with the authority to set rules for voter registration in federal elections.
In sum, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that they are likely to succeed on their claim that the NVRA preempts the Kansas DPOC law as it applies to motor voter registrants under § 5. Plaintiffs have also made a strong showing that preemption under the Elections Clause would not violate the State’s power under the Qualifications Clause to set and enforce its citizenship requirement for elections to federal office. The State is not precluded from enforcing its citizenship requirement. It simply must do so by requiring the “minimum amount of information necessary” to assess whether the citizenship requirement has been met. Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that the Kansas DPOC law as enforced does not meet this standard.
b. Duplication
Plaintiffs allege that the DPOC law further violates § 5 as to initial driver’s license applicants because they are required to provide duplicate information on the driver’s license application and the voter registration application: the same documentation serves to establish proof of lawful presence at the DMV and DPOC by county election officials. The Court cannot find on this record that Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that they are substantially likely to succeed on the merits of this theory of relief. Based on the current
Plaintiffs further point to the language in K.S.A. § 25 — 2352(b)(1) that explicitly conflicts with § 8 of the NVRA by providing that the voter registration section of the application
[m]ay require a second signature or other information that duplicates, or is in addition to, information in the driver’s license or nondriver’s identification card section of the application to prevent duplicate voter registrations, and to enable Kansas election officials to assess the eligibility of the applicant and to administer voter registration and other parts of the election process.
Although Plaintiffs make a strong argument that this provision is at odds with § 5 of the NVRA, they have not made a strong showing for the purposes of this preliminary injunction motion, that the DPOC law, as enforced, requires duplicate submissions of DPOC for initial driver’s license applicants.
In sum, the Court finds close factual questions about the extent to which the State requires duplicate proof of citizenship information from initial driver’s license applicants on the driver’s license and voter registration application forms.
2. Section 8 of the NVRA
Plaintiffs allege that K.A.R. § 7-23-15 violates § 8 of the NVRA by removing otherwise eligible voters from the State’s ELVIS system for failure to provide DPOC. Plaintiffs assert that in September 2015, more than 32,000 applicants were trapped “in limbo” on the suspense list, and that the regulation was designed by Defendants to “automatically remove registrants from the State’s voter rolls.” Plaintiffs urge that § 8 sets forth the exclusive grounds for removing a registrant from the voter list, and that failure to provide DPOC is not one of them. Secretary Kobach responds that § 8 does not apply here because none of the individuals deemed “incomplete” in ELVIS are “registrants” since those applications have not yet been accepted by county election officials. Defendant further notes that there are other reasons, such as a missing signature, why a person’s application would be deemed “incomplete,” so there is no way to assert that these people are all otherwise eligible to register.
Plaintiffs admit in the reply brief that the viability of this claim hinges on the success of their § 5 claim — if the Court determines that Plaintiffs’ are likely to succeed ■ in showing that the DPOC law runs afoul of § 5, then applicants that were cancelled or placed in suspense solely
The Court does not agree that Plaintiffs’ likelihood of success on the § 5 claim necessarily means they are likely to succeed on the § 8 claim challenging the regulation. The record reflects that an applicant is not “purged” from the voter rolls in the manner described by Plaintiffs. Instead, applicants who lack DPOC are placed in an incomplete status for a period of time to allow them to submit their DPOC, or to allow the State to confirm the applicants’ citizenship by other means. Under the regulation, if an applicant has not submitted DPOC within 90 days of the application, the applicant’s record is “cancelled,” which does not mean that the applicant is removed from the database. Instead, cancellation means the applicant must repeat the application process in its entirety, including providing DPOC, before registration can be completed. Mr. Caskey attests that voter records in the ELVIS system may be changed from “incomplete” or “can-celled,” to “active,” which would reflect the designation of a fully registered voter.
Giving credence to Mr. Caskey’s declaration .and testimony, Plaintiffs have not made a strong enough showing that they are substantially likely to succeed on their § 8 claim because § 8 only governs the removal of “a registrant” from the State’s official list of eligible voters.
B. Irreparable Harm
To constitute irreparable harm, the injury “must be both certain and great.”
The Court finds that Plaintiffs have made a strong showing of irreparable harm. There is uncontroverted evidence that thousands of qualified Kansas motor voter registration applicants have not been registered to vote by county elections officials solely based on their failure to submit DPOC. Several named Plaintiffs averred that they registered in 2013 and 2014 in order to vote in the 2014 elections, and that they desire to vote in the 2016 elections. Plaintiffs Strieker and Boynton both attempted to provide DPOC at DMV'of-fices, believed they had successfully registered, tried to vote in the 2014 election, but were only allowed to east provisional ballots that were not counted. Between January 1, 2013 -and March 23, 2016, there were 12,717 motor voter registration applications cancelled under K.A.R. § 7-23-16 for failure to provide DPOC. As of March 28, 2016, there are 5655 motor voter applications that are in “incomplete” status due to failure to provide DPOC. Certainly, many of the applicants that were cancelled lost the opportunity to vote in the 2014 elections. .All of these otherwise qualified applicants run the risk of losing the right to vote for federal offices in the 2016 primary and general election. Early voting for the August primary begins on July 13, 2016 — less than two months from now. This injury cannot be compensated for, either by money, or after a final determination on the merits, which is unlikely to occur before the 2016 elections take place. And the harm is not speculative — the applicants in “incomplete” or “cancelled” statuses in ELVIS will not be allowed to vote in the upcoming election without injunctive relief. Those votes cannot be recast in the event that the Plaintiffs later prevail on the merits. There is also evidence that the DPOC law has caused a chilling effect, dissuading those who try and fail at navigating the motor voter registration process from reapplying in the future.
Secretary Kobach suggests that Plaintiffs’ harm is reparable because each has the ability to submit DPOC and become registered before-the next election. In fact, his position is that it is Plaintiffs’ fault entirely that their applications have been placed in incomplete or cancelled status. He argues that the DPOC was well advertised, and that Plaintiffs received notice of their deficient applications. He attempts to distinguish this case from others where plaintiffs were entirely precluded from
Moreover, Ms. Bucci attested that she does not have DPOC and that it would be a hardship for her to obtain it. Plaintiffs have demonstrated a financial and administrative burden to obtaining the two most common forms of DPOC. The cost of obtaining a birth certifícate or passport is often prohibitive; both Ms. Bucci and Mr. Fish attested to this financial burden. And simply navigating the administrative landscape to replace a lost birth certificate, or to apply for a passport, requires time and diligence.
In Crawford, the Supreme Court considered the burden on voters associated with obtaining photo-ID that state law required be presented at the polling place for in-person voting.
Secretary Kobach’s reliance on subsection (m) as safety net for those individuals who lack one of the thirteen forms of DPOC required under the statute is overstated. As already described, that procedure is but one additional burdensome layer in the Kansas enforcement scheme that an applicant must navigate in order to
Secretary Kobach insists that Plaintiffs cannot show irreparable injury because they delayed filing this action to vindicate their rights. It is true that delay is one factor that sometimes “cuts against finding irreparable injury.”
Secretary Kobach argues that the Court should not consider classwide harm, and argues that the Court is without power to fashion injunctive relief that applies beyond the named Plaintiffs in this lawsuit. To be sure, the Court has not yet considered Plaintiffs’ pending motion for class certification. That motion is set for hearing on June 16, 2016. But Plaintiffs allege that the Kansas DPOC law, on its face and as enforced, is preempted by the NVRA, and that its enforcement has resulted in thou
In sum, the Court finds Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that they will suffer irreparable harm without a preliminary injunction.
C. Balance of Harms
Under this factor, the Court must “balance the competing claims of injury and consider the effect of granting or withholding the requested relief1’ on botfy parties.
As an initial matter, the Court finds no distinct burden associated with the Department of Revenue’s compliance with the proposed injunction. The injunction appears to require nothing more than the status quo enforcement efforts by DMV employees, who currently do not affirmatively request DPOC from motor voter registration applicants. The competing burdens associated with the preliminary injunction are all associated with the Secretary of State’s enforcement of the DPOC law.
The Secretary of State first urges that the State has an interest in preventing noncitizen registration, in preserving its own laws, and in ensuring voters in Kansas are not confused, which they would be by changing the law agaip. The Court recognizes “the legitimacy [and] importance of the State’s interest in counting only the votes of eligible voters,”
The Court is unpersuaded that the State’s interest in ensuring that Kansas voters are not confused is strong enough to counterbalance the irreparable harm that thousands of disenfranchised voters will- suffer if the DPOC prevents them from voting in federal elections. As discussed in detail earlier in this opinion, the record suggests that Kansas motor voters are already confused about the current DPOC law and how to meet its requirements. To the extent the State has a strong interest in preventing voter confusion, the Court cannot find that the status quo enforcement efforts further that State interest.
Mr. Kobach concedes that it is possible for it to comply with a preliminary injunction, but argues that the State would suffer severe administrative burdens due to: (1) changing .voter registration records, including providing notice,- for those applicants on the “incomplete” list or in cancelled status; (2) administering a two-tiered election with a large number of federal-only voters; and (3) contacting voters on the incomplete list who no longer reside at their last known addresses.
As to the first administrative burden identified by the State, Mr. Caskey testified that he could fashion reports in the ELVIS system to identify all motor voter applicants who have been classified as incomplete or cancelled based on the DPOC requirement. He testified that these two reports would take about 'thirty minutes each to run. Once these lists are generated, the State would be required to change those applicants’ statuses back to active, and send them a notice that their registration is complete. The Court cannot find that the State’s time spent changing applicants’ statuses back to active is unduly burdensome. It is a wholly automated process. Further, the Court cannot find that the cost to the State to notify voters of their completed registrations is unduly burdensome. As compared to the many notices the State would otherwise send to voters who lack DPOC, the burden is substantially less. For those applicants who are newly on the incomplete list, for example, this may end up saving the State money otherwise spent repeatedly contacting the applicants to notify them that their applications are incomplete and directing them to submit DPOC.
Next, the Secretary of State complains that the proposed injunction would create a two-tiered election regime in Kansas that would create separate requirements for registering to vote for federal and state elections. But, as previously discussed, the Court agrees with Plaintiffs that this two-tiered system is a problem of the State’s own making.
Finally, Defendants point to the administrative burden of locating applicants who have moved since the time of application. But as Plaintiffs point out, this burden is largely unnecessary because Kansas law does not prohibit a registrant from voting because they have moved.
In sum, while the Court acknowledges the Secretary of State will assume some administrative burdens in ceasing enforcement of the DPOC law as to federal elections, it simply cannot find that these burdens outweigh the real and imminent threat of disenfranchisement that Plaintiffs and those similarly situated will suffer without an injunction.
D. Public Interest
Defendants argue that the public interest is best served by enforcing duly enacted Kansas law. Plaintiffs urge that the public interest is best served by enfranchisement, and by enforcement of federal voter registration requirements under the NVRA. The Court agrees that the public interest in enforcing State law must give way under these circumstances to the federal interests outlined in the NVRA and described in detail earlier in this opinion. As the Sixth Circuit has succinctly explained:
While states have “a strong interest in their ability to enforce state election law requirements,” the public has a “strong interest in exercising the ‘fundamental political right’ to vote.” “That interest is best served by favoring enfranchisement*1151 and ensuring that qualified voters’ exercise of their right to vote is successful.”173
This conclusion is bolstered in this case by the Court’s earlier analysis that even if instances of noncitizens voting cause indirect voter disenfranchisement by diluting the votes of citizens, such instances pale in comparison to the number of qualified citizens who have been disenfranchised by this law. Accordingly, the Court finds granting injunctive relief would be in the public interest.
E. Security
Secretary Jordan asks that the Court require Plaintiffs to post a security bond if it issues a preliminary injunction in this matter. Defendant Kobaeh does not argue that a bond is required. Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(c) provides that “[t]he Court may issue a preliminary injunction or a temporary restraining order only if the movant gives security in an amount that the court considers proper to pay the costs and damages sustained by any party found to have been wrongfully enjoined or restrained.” The Court may exercise its discretion and determine a bond is unnecessary “if there is an absence of proof showing a likelihood of harm.”
V. Conclusion
Under the heightened preliminary injunction standard, Plaintiffs have sustained their burden of making a strong showing that they are likely to succeed on the merits of their claim that the Kansas DPOC law violates the NVRA provision that a motor voter registration application can require only the minimum amount of information necessary to enable state officials to assess an applicant’s eligibility to vote, and that they will suffer irreparable harm without an injunction. Without the injunction, approximately 18,000 Kansas motor voter registration applicants will be precluded from registering to vote solely based on their failure to provide DPOC. The record in this case suggests that there is a less burdensome way for the State to assess whether applicants meet the citizenship eligibility requirement; namely, by asking applicants to complete an attestation of citizenship under penalty of perjury.
The injunction requires the Secretary of State to register, to vote those applicants whose only infirmity was not having the opportunity to produce DPOC contemporaneously with their driver’s license applications, or later because of lack of consistent notice or reasonable opportunity to cure that infirmity. Although the Court is cognizant that the injunction will cause some administrative burden to the State, it is a burden that is outweighed by the risk of thousands of otherwise eligible voters being disenfranchised in upcoming federal elections. On balance, the public interest in the enfranchisement of otherwise eligible voters, the irreparable harm to prospective voters, the balance of harms, and Plaintiffs’ strong showing that they are likely to succeed on their claim that the DPOC law
VI. Stay
Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(c), during pen-dency of an appeal from an interlocutory order that grants an injunction, “the court may suspend, modify, restore, or grant an injunction on terms for bond or other terms that secure the opposing party’s rights.” Given the administrative challenges to the State that will be necessitated by the Court’s injunction, the Court will grant a short stay of this preliminary injunction in order to allow the State time to coordinate enforcement efforts, and to file any appeal to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals and obtain emergency relief from that Court, if desired. The injunction will therefore go into effect at midnight on May 31, 2016.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED BY THE COURT that Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction (Doc. 19) is granted in part and denied in part. Defendants are hereby enjoined from enforcing K.S.A. § 25-2309(Z) as to individuals who apply to register to vote in federal elections at the same time they apply for or renew a driver’s license. The Secretary of State is directed to register for federal elections all otherwise eligible motor voter registration applicants that have been cancelled or are in suspense due solely to their failure to provide DPOC. Plaintiffs motion to enjoin enforcement of K.A.R. § 7-23-15 is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs filed an Amended Complaint on March 17, 2016, adding an organizational plaintiff; The League of Women Voters of Kansas. Doc. 39,
. 52 U.S.C. § 20501(b).
. Id. § 20503(a).
.Id. § 20504(a)(1). "Federal office” is further defined in § 20502(2).
. Id. § 20504(c).
. Id. § 20507(a)(1)(A).
. Id. § 20507(a)(3).
. See 139 Cong. Rec, S5642-01 (daily ed. May 6, 1993) (statement of Sen. Ford).
. Id.; 139 Cong. Rec. S5677-04 (daily ed. May 7, 1993) (statement of Sen. Simpson),
. H.R. Rep. No. 103-66, at 23 (1993) (Conf. Rep.).
. 139 Cong. Rec. S2902 (daily ed. Mar. 16, 1993) (statement of Sen. Ford), attached as Kobach Ex. 7, Just two weeks before making this statement, however, Senator Ford responded to criticism of the NVRA that it would allow noncitizens to register to vote:
The safeguards in this bill are just as effective in preventing noncitizens from registering to vote.
Nothing in this legislation changes the requirements of eligibility to vote. You must still meet every requirement of eligibility. In fact, this bill specifically states in three separate places that the application for registration must set forth all the requirements for eligibility including citizenship. The ap*1115 plicant signs this attestation under penalty of perjury.
139 Cong. Rec. S2389-02,
. H.R. Rep. N. 103-66 at 23-24; 139 Cong. Rec. S5642-01 (daily ed. May 6, 1993) (statement of Sen. Ford).
. 139 Cong. Rec. S5642-01 (daily ed. May 6, 1993) (statement of Sen. Ford).
. K.S.A. § 8-240(b).
. Id. § 8-240(b)(2).
. Kansas Constitution art. 5, § 1.
.K.S.A. § 25-2302.
. K.S.A. § 25-2309(1).
. Id. § 25-2309(u).
. Id. § 25-2309(n).
. Id. § 25-2309(m).
. K.S.A. § 25-2203(a).
. Doc. 115, Tr. Hrg. at 68:20-69:7.
. Kobach Ex. 8, attach.
. Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 28.
. Kobach Ex. 8, attach.
. Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 29. Defendants provide no other evidence or citation regarding this testimony. There is no affidavit from the Seward County Clerk, or other direct evidence .of her testimony. .
,The Court confines its analysis of Dr. Min-nite's report to incidents of noncitizen voter fraud in Kansas, and specifically, to the incidents of voter fraud identified by Defendants in response to this motion. Defendants do not raise or rely upon the vast majority of evidence that Dr. Minnite impeaches in her report, thus the Court finds her general discussion of voter fraud is not relevant. The Court acknowledges that the district court in N.C. State Conference of the NAACP v. McCrory,
. Hearing on "The President’s Executive Actions on Immigration and Their Impact on State and Local Elections" Before the Sub-comm. on Nat'l Sec. and Subcomm. on Health Care, Benefits, and Admin. Rules, 114th Cong. (2015) (statement of Kris W. Kobach, Kansas Secretary of State), https://oversight.house. gov/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Kobach-Testimony-House-OGR-21215 .pdf.
. Id. at 2.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Kobach Ex. 1.
. Id. ¶ 24.
. This receipt was not offered into the record with the briefs or at the hearing. The testimony suggested that this is a transaction receipt. There was no evidence about where the DPOC requirement appears or how conspicuous it may or may not be.
. The parties use different language to describe the applicant’s status under this regulation. Plaintiffs refer to a cancelled application as a "purged” application. Because cancelled is the word used in the regulation and database, the Court uses that term throughout this opinion.
. No example of a written notice was offered into the record with the briefs or at the hearing.
. Doc. 121.
. Pis. Ex. 2; Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 34; Kobach Ex, 9 at 1-8.
.Kobach Ex. 9 at 22.
. Pis. Ex. 4; Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 36; Kobach Ex, 9 at 15-22.
. Plaintiffs claim in the Reply brief that Mr. Strieker was treated as a renewal applicant at the DMV since he previously resided in Kansas and held a Kansas license at that time.
.Pis. Ex. 5; Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 37; Kobach Ex. 9 at 23-42.
. Pis, Ex. 6; Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 38; Kobach Ex. 9 at 42-48,
. Kobach, Ex. 6; Doc, 115, Hrg, Tr. at 155:10-16.
. Included in the ELVIS record is a screen shot of what appears to be a scanned hard copy of Strieker's Kansas Voter Registration Application that is date stamped June 30, 2015, and was signed on June 28, 2015, It includes an attestation above his signature that he is a United States Citizen. Kobach Ex, 9 at 56. There is no indication in the record that the county election officials received notice that he had provided a passport to a DMV clerk.
. Pis. Ex. 7; Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 39; Kobach Ex. . 9 at 49-59,
. Plaintiffs Ex. 15 at 8. Mr. Caskey asserts that 16,319 applicants have been cancelled since the regulation went into effect for lack of DPOC, but his declaration did not isolate motor voter applicants. See Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 10.
. KobachEx. 1 ¶ 15.
. K.S.A. § 25-2311(e); K.A.R. § 7-23-14 (providing factors for elections officials to consider when assessing documents submitted as evidence of United States citizenship, and allowing voter registration applicants to submit documentation on the day before Election Day).
. Montoya v. Chao,
. Laughlin v. Kmart Corp.,
. Montoya,
. Harms v. IRS,
. United States ex rel. Hafter, D.O. v. Spectrum Emergency Care, Inc.,
. Hans v. Louisiana,
. Muscogee (Creek) Nation v. Pruitt,
. Va. Office for Protection & Advocacy v. Stewart,
.
. Id. (quoting Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation v. Wagnon,
.
. No. C2-00-1300,
. 52 U.S.C. § 20504.
. Id. § 20504(e).
. K.S.A. § 75-5110 (it is now called the Division of Vehicles; the Court refers to it by "DMV,” the name that many Kansans have come to refer to the Division, as it used to be called Division of Motor Vehicles).
.Id. § 75-5101
. Doc. 95, Ex. A at 14 ("These programs were established by the Secretary of State and DMV in a cooperative effort”); Kobach Ex. 1 ¶ 24.
. Doc. 95, Ex. A at 11-14.
. Id. at 14.
. Secretary Jordan complains that the Court cannot consider matters outside the pleadings on a motion to dismiss. While that is the general rule for motions to dismiss brought under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), on a Rule 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss, the Court has "wide discretion to allow affidavits, other documents, and a limited evidentiary hearing to resolve disputed jurisdictional facts.” Holt v. United States,
. Summers v. Earth Island Inst.,
. Id. at 493,
. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
. Tandy,
. Lujan,
. Id.
. Hackford v. Babbitt,
. Lujan,
. Tandy,
. See Harkness v. Brunner,
. 52 U.S.C. § 20504(c)(2)(A). .
. Although Kansas has apparently waived the proof of lawful presence requirement for renewals for the timé being, it is still statutorily required. See K.S.A. §§ 8-240(b)(2), 8-247(d)(1).
. 52 U.S.C, § 20510(b).
. K.S.A. §§ 25-2504, 25-2355.
. Scott v. Schedler,
. Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 20,
. Summum v. Pleasant Grove City,
. — U.S. -,
.
.
. Thomas v. Metro. Life Ins. Co.,
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. (quoting United States v. Hinckley,
. Black's Law Dictionary 1010 (7th ed. 1999).
. Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 741 (10th ed. 1996).
. 52 U.S.C. § 20508(b).
. Id. § 20504(c)(2)(B).
. Rajala v. Gardner,
. Id. (quoting United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc.,
. 52 U.S.C. § 20501(a)-(b) (providing Congressional findings and purposes of NVRA); Young v. Fordice,
.The Court need not wade into the significance of Congress’ failure to include Simpson Amendment in the final bill because the plain meaning of the statute controls the analysis. See Thomas v. Metro. Life Ins. Co.,
.
. Id. at 275,
. Id. at 284-85,
. Id. at 285,
. Id. at 286,
. 52 U.S.C. § 20504(c)(2)(B).
. The example provided by Ae Young Court — that States may decide whether or not to tell an applicant that the registration only counts for federal elections — is not a topic specifically addressed in § 5(c)(2). In contrast, information necessary to assess eligibility requirements is specifically addressed by the statute.
. § 20504(c)(2).
. See Arizona v. ITCA, — U.S. —,
. Id. § 20504(c)(2)(C)(i)-(ii).
. Id. § 20504(c)(2)(C)(iii).
. See K.S.A. § 8-240(b)(2) (requiring "valid documentary evidence” of lawful presence,
.
. Id. at 199-200,
. Id. at 186,
. The Court acknowledges that there is some evidence of noncitizen voter fraud outside of Kansas. See Doc. 80, Ex, A. The Court further acknowledges that in Crawford, when discussing the State’s interest in preventing voter fraud, the Court considered evidence of voter impersonation fraud in other parts of the country.
. Kobach Ex. 8,
. Doc. 19, Ex. 10; Sari Horwitz, Want to vote, in this state? You have to have a passport or dig up a birth certificate, Wash. Post, Feb, 19, 2016, available at https://www. washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/ 2016/02/19/how-kansas-has-become-a-battleground-state-for-voting-rights/.
. Doc. 115, Hrg, Tr, at 68:20-69:7.
. U,S. Const, art. I, § 4, cl. 1.
. Arizona v. ITCA, — U.S. -,
. Id. (quoting Smiley v. Holm,
. Id. at 2254 (quoting Ex parte Siebold,
. U.S, Const, art, I, § 2, cl. 1; see also Art. II, § 1, cl. 2 (presidential electors); amend. 17 (senatorial electors),
. 52 U.S.C. § 20505(a)(1).
. Id. § 20508(b).
.
. Id. at 2257.
. Id. at 2258-59.
. Id. at 2259.
. Id. at 2260.
.
. Id. at 1188.
. Id.
.Id. at 1188-99. After this decision, the EAC regained a quorum of commissioners and an Executive Director was appointed. Kansas again asked the EAC to modify the state-specific instructions to the federal form, and this time, the EAC agreed. See Kobach Ex. 4. That decision is being challenged under the APA in a case now pending before the - United States District Court for the District of Columbia. League of Women Voters of the United States v. Newby, No. 16-236-RJL, Doc. 1 (D.D.C. Feb. 12, 2016).
. Kobach v. U.S. Election Assistance Comm’n,
. Id. at 1199.
. Id.
. See Ass'n of Comm’y Org. for Reform Now (ACORN) v. Edgar,
.
. Id. at 2268 (Thomas, J., dissenting).
. Id. at 2270 (Thomas, J,, dissenting).
. Id. at 2274 (Alito, X, dissenting).
. Id. at 2255 (footnote omitted).
. See id.; 52 U.S.C. § 20501(b)(1).
.Prior to the EAC’s January 29, 2016 decision to modify the state-specific rules for the Kansas Federal Form, the State was required to conduct a two-tiered system for those who registered by mail. Under Kobach, tire EAC’s earlier decision to reject the state-specific instructions requiring DPOC was upheld, but the State form continued to require DPOC.
. Compare U.S. Student Ass’n Found. v. Land,
. Prairie Band of Potawatomi Indians v. Pierce,
. Id. (quoting Am. Hosp. Ass’n v. Harris,
. Reynolds v. Sims,
. Kikumura v. Hurley,
.Plaintiff -Bucci stated that she was discouraged from trying again to register to vote based on her experience. And Plaintiff submitted the expert opinion of Michael McDonald, who concludes that applicants who are denied registration due to the DPOC requirement are less likely to participate in the electoral process going forward. Plaintiffs Ex. 1 at 19; Ex. 15 at 1.
. See Husted,
.
. Id. at 200-01,
. Id. at 199,
. RoDa Drilling Co. v. Siegal,
. RoDa Drilling,
. 52 U.S.C. § 20510(b).
. See, e.g., Rodriguez v. Providence Comm’y Corr., Inc.,
. Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council,
. Crawford v. Marion Cnty. Election Bd.,
. Id. at 200,
. The Court notes that this two-tiered registration procedure has been challenged under State law in Belenky v. Kobach, No. 2013CV1331 (Shawnee Cnty. ,Dist. Ct). The district court granted summary judgment to the plaintiffs in that case, holding that the Secretary of State lacks legal authority under Kansas law "to compromise or limit ‘Federal Form' registrants, such as Plaintiffs, right to register and vote in Kansas elections.” Id., Mem. Op. & Order at 25 (Jan. 15, 2016). The Secretary of State's Motion for Relief from Judgment or Order is pending in that matter.
. See Arizona v. ITCA, — U.S. -,
. The only evidence of administrative burden is Mr. Caskey's conclusory assertion in his declaration that "[t]he administrative burdens on the State and counties in conducting a two-tier election would be severe." Kobach Ex. 1 1(23.
.See K.S.A. § 25-2316c(b).
. Kobach Ex. 8
. See Obama for Am. v. Husted,
. Id.
. Coquina Oil Corp. v. Transwestern Pipeline Co.,
