U.S.

Texas Agrees To Stop Attempts To Remove Thousands From Voter Rolls

Texas officials have agreed to stop investigating possible non-U.S. citizens on voter rolls as part of a settlement.

Texas Agrees To Stop Attempts To Remove Thousands From Voter Rolls
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A federal judge blocked Texas from removing potential non-U.S. citizens from its voter rolls Friday. 

Multiple civil rights groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, filed a lawsuit against interim Texas Secretary of State David Whitley. 

Whitley said state officials have identified nearly 100,000 possible non-U.S. citizens on their voter rolls. His office then gave the lists to county election officials and told them to decide if they need to be removed. 

Officials in Texas have agreed to stop the investigation as part of the settlement. The state also has to pay $450,000 in legal fees. 

In a statement, the ACLU of Texas said: “The right to vote is sacrosanct, and no eligible voter should have to worry about losing that right."