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US Midterms 2026
14JUN

DOJ drops its own database case

3 min read
11:52UTC

The Justice Department moved on 2 June to dismiss Common Cause v. DOJ, the suit defending its national voter-database programme, while pressing six appeals to scale a single winning ruling across many states.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The DOJ's retreat at trial is the setup for a wider appellate push where one ruling can bind many states.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) moved on Tuesday 2 June to dismiss its own case, Common Cause v. DOJ, the suit defending the national voter-database architecture behind the SAVE programme 1. SAVE is the administration's national voter-data system, which the DOJ's lawsuits aimed to feed with state voter-registration files. Common Cause is a nonpartisan democracy advocacy group, and the case it was fighting was the department's own.

Eight of the department's 31 voter-data suits have now been dismissed, and the DOJ is appealing six of them, in Arizona, California, Massachusetts, Michigan, Rhode Island and Oregon 2. The Brennan Center for Justice, a law and policy institute tracking the litigation, records that at least 16 states have handed over complete voter files despite The Court fights. District judges keep dismissing the suits using portable reasoning that first emerged in Massachusetts and spread to Maine and Wisconsin .

The DOJ abandons an architecture it cannot defend at trial and pursues the same state files where a single appellate ruling scales across a whole circuit. Dropping the flagship case while pressing the appeals is a docket-management trade, not a retreat. The Ninth Circuit, the federal appeals court covering nine western states, heard the Oregon appeal on 19 May , and the expedited Sixth Circuit is handling Michigan; neither has ruled. The slip opinion the DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel issued during the district-court losing streak reads, in hindsight, as the paperwork for this pivot.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Trump administration launched a programme called SAVE (Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility) to build a national voter database, and filed 31 lawsuits demanding that states hand over their voter registration files. Many states refused, and courts kept throwing the cases out, finding that the DOJ had not clearly explained which law gave it the right to demand those files. Instead of fighting those losses, the DOJ is now dropping the suit it brought against Common Cause, the group that was challenging the whole database idea. It is pressing six appeals in Arizona, California, Massachusetts, Michigan, Rhode Island, and Oregon, where a single circuit ruling could force many states to comply at once. The DOJ's six appellate challenges are now its entire active strategy for collecting state voter files.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Massachusetts portable dismissal reasoning is the proximate root cause: by finding that the DOJ complaint failed to identify which statute authorised its voter-data demand, the Massachusetts court produced a template any defending state could use, and five additional district courts applied it without significant modification. Once the reasoning became portable, each new dismissal reinforced the others, creating a negative feedback loop at the trial level.

The deeper structural root cause is the tension between the federal government's voter-file demand and the elections clause of the Constitution, which assigns primary electoral administration to the states.

States that refused to hand over voter files did so on the ground that no federal statute clearly authorised a demand for complete state voter databases. The OLC opinion issued during the losing streak asserted that authority, but an OLC opinion binds only executive-branch agencies, not federal courts.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The 9th Circuit's Oregon ruling, expected after 19 May oral argument, becomes the first appellate test of whether the Massachusetts dismissal reasoning survives appeal. An affirmance would create binding 9th Circuit precedent collapsing remaining cases in Western states.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Sixteen states have already handed over complete voter files under the threat of litigation, creating a data asymmetry: those files remain in the SAVE system regardless of the outcome of the remaining suits, since there is no legal mechanism requiring their return.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Self-dismissal of the national-database case forfeits the district-court evidentiary record on how the SAVE architecture functions, preventing future oversight litigation from accessing those documents through the Common Cause suit's discovery channel.

    Medium term · Reported
  • Opportunity

    If the 6th Circuit Michigan appeal is expedited and rules for the DOJ, it creates a circuit split with the 9th Circuit's likely affirmance, providing a vehicle for the Supreme Court to resolve the statutory-authority question definitively.

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

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Brennan Center for Justice· 14 Jun 2026
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