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Tag: voterdata

US Politics

The Federal Assault on State Sovereignty and Citizen Privacy: When 'Election Integrity' Becomes a Weapon

The Justice Department has expanded its legal campaign to force states to turn over voter lists containing sensitive personal information by suing six more states that have refused to provide the data. This aggressive federal overreach represents a dangerous assault on citizen privacy and state sovereignty under the false pretense of election integrity, threatening the very foundations of democratic self-governance.

US Politics

The Trump Administration's Deceptive Assault on Voter Data: A Dangerous Breach of Democratic Trust

Democratic secretaries of state have accused the Trump administration of misleading them about how voter data would be used, sharing it with Homeland Security to search for noncitizens instead of for evaluating compliance with federal voting laws as originally stated. This deceptive, unprecedented collection of mass voter data represents a dangerous assault on election integrity and could be used to spread disinformation that undermines our democratic institutions.

US Politics

A Victory for Federalism: Rhode Island Judge Rejects DOJ's Voter Data Fishing Expedition

A federal judge dismissed the Department of Justice's lawsuit demanding detailed Rhode Island voter data, finding it a legally impermissible 'fishing expedition'. This is a vital victory for federalism, privacy, and the rule of law against a disturbing pattern of federal overreach that seeks to intimidate states and potentially weaponize sensitive citizen information.

US Politics

A Judicial Rebuke: The Courts Stand Firm Against Federal Overreach on Voter Data

A federal judge has definitively blocked the Trump Justice Department's attempt to compel Arizona to hand over its voter registration database, marking the sixth such court defeat for the federal government's unprecedented data grab. This ruling is a resounding victory for state sovereignty, voter privacy, and the very principle that the federal government cannot weaponize old laws to build a national surveillance registry under the false pretense of securing elections.