State election officials reject Trump administration's voter rolls request

Roughly two dozen states, including Minnesota, have rebuffed the Trump administration's demand for access to their voter rolls, sparking legal battles with the Justice Department. Democratic officials view the push as an overreach tied to unsubstantiated election fraud claims. The administration insists the requests ensure compliance with federal election laws.

The Trump administration has launched a yearlong campaign seeking voter records from nearly every state and the District of Columbia to verify compliance with federal election laws and maintain accurate rolls free of non-citizen voters. This effort, which coincides with President Trump's repeated assertions that the 2020 election was rigged, has met fierce resistance from state officials.

At the forefront is Minnesota, where Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote to Governor Tim Walz, linking the handover of voter rolls to restoring 'law and order' amid an immigration crackdown. Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a Democrat, rejected the request, describing it as serving the president's 'longstanding but false view that election systems around the country are rigging elections.' Simon noted that the matter was already under court dispute and he has received no further response from the administration.

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, also a Democrat, labeled the demand 'extortion' during a recent meeting of the National Association of Secretaries of State. 'The voter roll stuff is not about voter rolls. There’s something bigger going on,' Fontes said, suggesting broader motives beyond routine maintenance.

The Justice Department has sued 24 non-compliant states—most led by Democrats—along with the District of Columbia, citing privacy concerns over sensitive voter data. Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows expressed fears that federal access could target individuals based on identity or politics, stating, 'This Justice Department has weaponized its office.'

While at least 11 states, including Republican-led Wyoming, have complied—Wyoming's Secretary of State Chuck Gray called it 'routine voter list maintenance'—critics like Uzoma Nkwonta of Elias Law Group decry it as federal overreach. Nkwonta highlighted DOJ expectations of removing 'hundreds of thousands' of voters, emphasizing that maintaining rolls is a state responsibility.

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson defended the actions under laws like the Civil Rights Act and Help America Vote Act, affirming President Trump's commitment to election confidence. The Justice Department declined immediate comment.

संबंधित लेख

Election officials strategize against potential federal interference in 2026 midterms, with polling station and agents visible outside.
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Local election officials prepare for possible federal interference in 2026 midterms

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State and local election administrators say they are preparing for potential disruptions tied to federal actions ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, after President Donald Trump’s administration moved early in his second term to tighten voting rules and reduce federal election-security staffing. Officials cite concerns ranging from litigation and requests for voter data to the possibility of armed deployments near polling places and immigration enforcement activity that could intimidate voters.

President Donald Trump called for Republicans to take control of elections in at least 15 states during a Monday interview, citing concerns over illegal voting and election integrity. The remarks came amid an FBI raid on a Georgia election office probing 2020 interference allegations. Trump tied the push to his unsubstantiated claims of winning the 2020 election decisively.

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Several secretaries of state who gained prominence for defending the 2020 election results against false claims by Donald Trump are now seeking governorships in 2026. These candidates, from both parties, are shifting focus to economic issues like taxes and affordability, betting that voters have moved past the events of five years ago. While Trump continues to revisit those claims, the candidates emphasize current priorities over past battles.

A Texas man who became a U.S. citizen as a teenager had his voter registration canceled after a federal database search flagged him as a potential noncitizen. The case has intensified concerns about the accuracy and rollout of an overhauled SAVE system that the Trump administration has promoted as a way for states to check voter eligibility, with election officials and advocates warning that it could mistakenly remove eligible voters from the rolls.

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Five Democratic-led states sued the Trump administration over its freeze of $10 billion in federal welfare funding, alleging political motivation. A New York federal judge temporarily blocked the freeze on Friday, reinstating funds while the case proceeds.

Opposition parties in Assam have united against bulk and false objections in the ongoing Special Revision of electoral rolls, fearing genuine voters will be excluded. They submitted a memorandum to the Chief Electoral Officer demanding summary rejection of such objections. The move comes amid concerns over targeting specific communities ahead of state assembly elections.

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In a Fresh Air interview, The Atlantic's David A. Graham sketches out how President Donald Trump could try to tilt the 2026 midterms — from posting federal forces near polling places to pressuring election officials and even having agents seize voting equipment — while early moves on redistricting and federal monitoring show the ground already shifting.

 

 

 

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