A Massachusetts federal district court dismissed the Department of Justice's voter-data lawsuit on 9 April 2026 on the ground that the DOJ demand failed to state the legal basis for its request 1. The University of Wisconsin Law State Democracy Research Initiative tracker, which records DOJ voter-data suits across the country, now shows 30 states and DC sued, up from 29 in the last briefing . Five cases have been dismissed, one settled, and 24 plus DC remain in active litigation.
The court found the DOJ demand insufficient not because the underlying request was unlawful but because the complaint did not specify which statute authorised it. That ruling is portable: any of the 24 states still in active litigation can cite Massachusetts and move to dismiss on identical procedural grounds. The DOJ's original rhetorical framing, under which the demand was self-evidently authorised by the 1960 Civil Rights Act, is now something a court has required the department to prove rather than assert. Attorney General Pam Bondi has stated the DOJ "will continue filing proactive election integrity litigation until states comply with basic election safeguards", a posture that assumes the underlying cases hold.
The architecture strained here is the substitute that replaced the enjoined 31 March executive order. With seven of its eight provisions blocked in court , the administration migrated election-integrity operations into affirmative state-by-state litigation that progresses regardless of injunction. One dismissal does not collapse that architecture; the DOJ can refile Massachusetts with a cleaner statement of basis. The 9 April ruling forces the DOJ to plead the specific statute rather than treat authority as self-evident. Five of the original thirty suits are already gone, and the Massachusetts reasoning has yet to be tested in the 24 pending cases.
