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US Midterms 2026
29MAY

DOJ appeals its Michigan voter-file loss

2 min read
08:48UTC

The DOJ asked the full Sixth Circuit on 8 July to rehear its demand for Michigan's unredacted voter file, its first en banc escalation of six straight voter-data defeats.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The DOJ is escalating one Michigan voter-file loss to the full Sixth Circuit, not to the Supreme Court.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a petition for rehearing en banc with the full Sixth Circuit on 8 July, asking every active judge on the court to revive its demand for Michigan's complete, unredacted voter file. En banc rehearing sets aside a smaller panel's decision and puts the question to the whole appeals court. The DOJ wants Michigan's roll to feed the federal voter-eligibility checks at the centre of its campaign.

A three-judge panel had rejected the same demand 2-1 on 24 June, finding the department never specified which statute authorised it . The DOJ argues that panel misread Title III of the Civil Rights Act of 1960, which it says compels states to surrender voter records for federal inspection. The case names Michigan's Secretary of State, Jocelyn Benson, as defendant.

This is the first of the DOJ's six voter-data losses to reach en banc review rather than a refiling or a fresh panel, and no petition to the Supreme Court has followed. The Sixth Circuit grants full-court rehearings sparingly. The choice signals the department would rather exhaust the Sixth Circuit than test its losing reasoning before the justices yet.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A federal appeals court panel already ruled against the Department of Justice's demand for Michigan's full voter list, 2 votes to 1. Now DOJ is asking every judge on that court, rather than the original three, to rehear the case. This is called an en banc petition, and courts grant it rarely. If DOJ wins, it could reopen the door to its voter-data demands nationwide; if it loses, this ruling becomes binding precedent making future demands harder everywhere in the circuit.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

En banc rehearing requires a majority of the Sixth Circuit's active judges to vote for review, a bar that succeeds in roughly one in ten petitions nationally. DOJ's choice to seek it signals the department sees the panel's reasoning as an existential threat to its remaining seven appeals, beyond this single Michigan loss.

The structural problem is that DOJ's sole surviving legal theory, the 66-year-old Civil Rights Act of 1960, was drafted for targeted enforcement against documented discrimination, not a modern nationwide voter-roll matching programme. Retrofitting a narrow 1960 statute onto a 2026 data-collection goal keeps producing the same particularity objection across circuits.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    A Sixth Circuit en banc ruling against DOJ would bind Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee, hardening the particularity requirement across four states.

First Reported In

Update #12 · Voter-data drive stalls; jobs turn soft

Law.com (National Law Journal)· 9 Jul 2026
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This Event
DOJ appeals its Michigan voter-file loss
En banc review is the department's first attempt to overturn a voter-data loss at the whole circuit rather than refile or go straight to the Supreme Court.
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