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.
