Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
US Midterms 2026
12APR

Four more courts toss DOJ voter-data suits

3 min read
15:24UTC

Federal courts in California, Michigan, Oregon, and Rhode Island dismissed DOJ voter-data lawsuits between 9 and 17 April, all relying on the procedural reasoning the Massachusetts court established earlier in the month.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Five district court dismissals strain the DOJ's voter-data architecture; they do not yet collapse it.

Four federal district courts dismissed Department of Justice (DOJ) voter-data lawsuits in the fortnight after Massachusetts voided its case on 9 April . California, Michigan, Oregon, and Rhode Island all leaned on the same reasoning: each cited state law did not explicitly grant the federal government authority to demand voter records. The California ruling held that the administration "may not unilaterally usurp the authority over elections". Rhode Island dismissed on Friday 17 April 1. The University of Wisconsin Law School tracker now records five dismissals across the DOJ's nationwide suit wave , .

The Massachusetts reasoning attacks a procedural defect rather than the substantive question of whether the 1960 Civil Rights Act authorises bulk voter-data demands. That makes the DOJ's loss curable on refiling, but expensive: each refiled case restarts the discovery clock and gives defendants a roadmap of which arguments survived in the first round. Five dismissals out of roughly 30 originating cases leaves the architecture straining but not collapsing.

The DOJ is appealing California, Michigan, and Oregon. Counter-view from the Trump administration, attributed to Attorney General Pam Bondi: the suits are routine compliance enforcement and the dismissals are procedural defects the department can cure on refiling. That framing has not yet been tested in any appellate court. The 9th Circuit hears the Oregon appeal on Tuesday 19 May, the first circuit-level test of whether the trial-court reasoning survives review.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US government has sued states to force them to hand over voter registration data, including sensitive personal information. Five states have gone to court and won, but not because the government's underlying goal was wrong: they won because the government's lawyers wrote the lawsuits incorrectly, failing to specify exactly which law gave them the right to demand the records. The government can refile those lawsuits with better paperwork. Whether the underlying demand is actually legal is a question that no court has answered yet.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 1960 Civil Rights Act's section on voter-data access was drafted to address specific discriminatory voting practices, not to authorise bulk national voter registration file demands. The DOJ chose to build its voter-data programme on that statutory foundation without first testing whether the foundation would hold in federal court.

Five independent courts have now found the same gap: the department cited the statute without specifying which provision authorised the precise demand it was making. That drafting failure is correctable on refiling, but each refiling restarts the litigation clock and gives defending states a clearer roadmap of which arguments survived the first round.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The 9th Circuit Oregon hearing is the first appellate test; an affirmance would convert trial-court reasoning into binding precedent across the western circuit, covering California, Oregon, and Washington, making refiling those cases substantially harder for the DOJ.

  • Risk

    If the DOJ refiles all five dismissed cases with corrected statutory citations before the autumn, the litigation restarts with a discovery clock running through the November 2026 election period, creating maximum disruption to state election administration.

First Reported In

Update #4 · 189 Days to Go: Calendar versus court

University of Wisconsin Law School State Democracy Research Initiative· 28 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Conservative-institutionalist dissent (WSJ editorial board)
Conservative-institutionalist dissent (WSJ editorial board)
The Wall Street Journal editorial board's warning that aggressive Republican redistricting in a D+6.9 environment risks energising the opposing base beyond what drawn-in margins absorb has gained additional force after Paxton's win converted a safe Texas seat into a contested one; the board's cross-ideological caution is the dissent the Republican consensus on Callais is not publicly engaging.
V-Dem Institute and Chatham House
V-Dem Institute and Chatham House
V-Dem's Anna Grzymala-Busse has logged the Callais-to-map-lock sequence as completing a 13-year Roberts Court rollback of the Voting Rights Act; Chatham House analysts are tracking the simultaneous Hawkes ruling and Virginia deadline lock as the point at which redistricting litigation shifted from a live 2026 variable to a post-cycle accountability mechanism with no near-term remedy.
Canadian USMCA trade watchers
Canadian USMCA trade watchers
Canadian trade officials monitoring the 2026 USMCA review window see the Paxton win as a complicating variable: Paxton has opposed USMCA expansion, and a Texas Senate seat shifting from Cornyn-style trade institutionalism to MAGA opposition would narrow the bipartisan Senate coalition on which Canada has historically relied for tariff schedule negotiations.
EU trade and sanctions analysts
EU trade and sanctions analysts
EU Commission trade officials tracking the Ways and Means Committee composition note that a Democratic House majority after November would restore committee leverage on tariff schedules; the current D+6.9 environment is the first reading this cycle that makes a Democratic flip structurally plausible, reducing the probability of a locked Republican tariff posture through 2028.
US domestic political split
US domestic political split
Republican strategists outside the Trump camp warn the NRSC now defends a Texas Senate candidate it publicly called 'repulsive and disgusting', stretching resources in a state budgeted as safe; Democratic strategists see the Paxton win and D+6.9 generic ballot as the first convergence of candidate-quality and environmental tailwinds in the same cycle.
Black voters in Alabama
Black voters in Alabama
Four congressional primaries are being voided while 2.4 million Alabamans cast ballots today, with Shomari Figures's majority-Black seat scheduled for elimination under the 11 August re-do map. Figures was elected in 2024 as only the second Black congressman from Alabama in modern history.