Justice Department sues 6 states for failing to turn over voter registration rolls
Source: CBS News
Updated on: September 25, 2025 / 2:51 PM EDT
Washington The Justice Department on Thursday sued six states for what it said was their refusal to turn over statewide voter registration lists sought by the attorney general. The suits were filed against the top election officials in California, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania and allege the moves not to provide the voter registration rolls violate federal law.
"Clean voter rolls are the foundation of free and fair elections," Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement. "Every state has a responsibility to ensure that voter registration records are accurate, accessible and secure states that don't fulfill that obligation will see this Department of Justice in court."
The suits, filed in federal courts in each state, seek to force the elections officials to provide all voter information contained in their registration rolls, including names, birth dates, driver's license numbers and partial Social Security numbers. The Justice Department claimed that failing to turn over the rolls prevents the attorney general from determining whether the states are following list maintenance requirements in a federal law known as the Help America Vote Act.
It has already sued Oregon and Maine for failing to provide information on procedures for maintaining their voter lists and copies of statewide voter registration rolls.
Read more: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/justice-department-lawsuit-6-states-voter-registration/
Links to SUITS (PDFs)
CA - https://www.justice.gov/crt/media/1415101/dl?inline
MI - https://www.justice.gov/crt/media/1415131/dl
MN - https://www.justice.gov/crt/media/1415121/dl
NY - https://www.justice.gov/crt/media/1415151/dl
NH - https://www.justice.gov/crt/media/1415136/dl
PA - https://www.justice.gov/crt/media/1415106/dl

popsdenver
(533 posts)"no more secrets" is upon us...........can you imagine how much damage can be done to Dem Voters if they acquire all of that personal information?
LetMyPeopleVote
(170,297 posts)Bayard
(27,150 posts)Isn't this all totally up to the states?
OldBaldy1701E
(9,135 posts)Until I see some laws about it, they don't get shiat.
Bring on the suits. They will lose and then what, Pammy?
Are you really going to hope that the Sinister Six will back you up? Because I am not sure of that one.
ananda
(33,344 posts)Sheesh
proud patriot
(102,270 posts)Fuck Pam Bondi !
mdbl
(7,447 posts)
FakeNoose
(38,767 posts)
BumRushDaShow
(160,763 posts)I remember Shapiro, who was AG at the time, and Tom Wolf (as governor) told them to go pound sand.
LetMyPeopleVote
(170,297 posts)States are in charge of elections and trump had NOT provided a good reason for these records
Link to tweet
https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/doj-sues-six-states-escalating-campaign-to-seize-private-voter-data/
The Department of Justice did not identify any legal basis in its June 25 letter that would entitle it to Minnesotas voter registration list, Justin Erickson, general counsel for Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon (D), wrote. Nor did it explain how this information would be used, stored, and secured.
In August, Pennsylvania Secretary of State Al Schmidt (R) wrote, Because your letters do not provide any legal justification for the Department to disregard this sacred obligation, we are unable to share such confidential information with you.
New Hampshire law authorizes the Secretary of State to release the statewide voter registration list in limited circumstances not applicable here, wrote New Hampshire Secretary of State David Scanlan (R) in his letter rejecting DOJs demand. ....
This isnt just about a data request, Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes (D) said in a statement to Democracy Docket. Its about protecting your privacy, your security, and your fundamental right to vote free from unnecessary federal overreach. Once that information leaves our custody, there is no guarantee about how its handled, where it ends up, or whether its properly secured. To date, there has been no clear legal justification or transparent explanation for these demands.
live love laugh
(15,927 posts)We have a short windowa year or less before the total clampdown.
zorbasd
(478 posts)Just like that British analytic firm in 2016...they're fascist bastards...
Firestorm49
(4,451 posts)anything that this cabal of idiots has to say.
electric_blue68
(24,035 posts)From Trump's DOJ?
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ahem
LetMyPeopleVote
(170,297 posts)The DOJ's demands for these voter lists are evidently to build a nationwide voter database. These efforts may be violating federal law. A law professor has been writing extensively on this issue. I apologize but the articles set forth below are in law professor speak and are abstract and not easy to follow. If you go to the links, you will see that the law professor cites himself extensively and relies on his prior articles which is frustrating.
DOJâs new lawsuit seems to show DOJ is violating federal law - Election Law Blog
— Servelan (@servelan.newsie.social.ap.brid.gy) 2025-09-19T06:56:49.000Z
https://electionlawblog.org/?p=152107
https://electionlawblog.org/?p=152107
The DOJ has been demanding these files with such confidence that Ive been wondering whether theres some not-visible-to-outsiders internal document that relieves those Privacy Act concerns. Both the Oregon complaint and the Maine complaint begin to lay out DOJs response to why its complying with the Privacy Act. And if what they said is all they got, thats an awful lot of confidence without the substance to back it up.
In the complaints, most of the DOJ responses on the Privacy Act (including their citation of a website for voluntary reports by individual citizens of civil rights violations) are non sequiturs: they just dont answer the question. But the DOJ does mention the systems of records notices the disclosure required under the Privacy Act that it thinks authorize grabbing the voter files. (Here, here, and here.) Theres only one thats even plausibly relevant: its the one that allows the Civil Rights Division (CRT) to keep general info on targets, victims, and witnesses associated with their cases. The notice is pretty straightforward, and its roots go back to 1975 (when the information was stored on index cards and file jackets). .....
I suspect that the states resisting DOJs demands are going to respond, in part, by saying that theyve got the right (and responsibility) to decline to abet DOJs violation of federal law. That, in turn, means that the DOJ is likely to have to defend its compliance with the Privacy Act in court, with federal judges probing whether theyve done their homework. And that is a resolution I think Oregon and Maine and their citizens are likely to welcome.
The law professor has written a number of articles on the apparent violation of the privacy act by the DOJ
https://electionlawblog.org/?p=151626
The new letters mention a totally different part of the Privacy Act, and otherwise make some noises about privacy, but those are mostly non sequiturs. I still havent seen any indication that the Civil Rights Division has done the homework the Privacy Act requires to collect the voter files. Theyve provided notices on some information the Division maintains in the course of regular enforcement work: enforcing civil rights means youll collect some info about victims and targets and witnesses. But none of those notices fairly flag that the Division plans to accumulate a national voter file, with the personal information (and First Amendment activity) of Americans who arent any of the above.
The Privacy Act isnt just a process barrier of its own. It also provides important context for understanding the litigation-hold provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1960. Given increasing congressional skepticism of federal government acquisition of Americans personal data in 1974, it would be deeply weird (not to mention ahistorical) to read the 1960 statute to override the careful constraints in the Privacy Act, giving the Civil Rights Division the authority to vacuum up information on more than 155 million voters, without any individualized basis and in service of an invented federal power to double-check every states list. Instead, reading the two statutes together helps confirm that the Civil Rights Act authority is as we thought it was: authorizing the AG to get specific information where theres reason to believe there was a particularized problem in an election within the last 22 months.
The states that are opposing these requests will be litigating this issue. This law professor believes that the courts will rule against the DOJ
https://electionlawblog.org/?p=152233
The law nerd in me is looking forward to following these lawsuits.