
Brennan Center for Justice
NYU School of Law-affiliated non-partisan legal institute; research authority on voting rights, war powers, and democracy.
Last refreshed: 2 May 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics
Can the Brennan Center's war powers analysis stop a president from declaring a war over unilaterally?
Timeline for Brennan Center for Justice
Mentioned in: Florida locks its map for November
US Midterms 2026Mentioned in: Trump strikes Iran with no war authority
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: New York moves to count AI job losses
AI: Jobs, Power & MoneyPublished the tracker recording 8 of 31 suits dismissed and 16 states handing over voter files
US Midterms 2026: DOJ drops its own database caseMentioned in: Shadow docket shields Alabama map for 2026
US Midterms 2026Is the Brennan Center for Justice non-partisan?
What does the Brennan Center say about the SAVE Act?
What is the Brennan Center for Justice?
Background
The Brennan Center for Justice is a non-partisan law and policy institute housed at NYU School of Law, named after Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan Jr. Founded in 1995, it covers elections, criminal justice reform, and national security. In election years it functions as a rapid-response research body, publishing real-time analysis of executive orders, court rulings, and legislative changes that affect voter access. Its work is cited by Democratic litigants and characterised by Republican critics as advocacy masquerading as research.
In the 2026 election cycle the Brennan Center is the principal research and advocacy body documenting the scope and impact of voting law changes. Its research underpins the argument that the SAVE Act would disenfranchise an estimated 21 million eligible US voters who lack the documentary proof of citizenship the bill would require. Its documentation of historical voting suppression patterns provides the evidentiary base for Voting Rights Act litigation, including cases arguing the Florida and Texas maps violate Section 2.
Senior Counsel Katherine Yon Ebright, of the Brennan Center's Liberty and National Security Programme, was the key cited authority on whether Trump's 1 May 2026 War Powers Resolution letter could pause the Section 1544(b) clock. Her analysis held that the statute supports no pause mechanism: once the 60-day period begins, it runs until Congress acts or hostilities end.