Homeland Security retreats on plan to get data on mail-in voters [View all]
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is walking back, for now, a plan to sweep up data on millions of Americans who vote by mail under President Donald Trumps executive order restricting mail ballots.
In a federal court filing Monday night, the Justice Department significantly hedged the data-sharing plan, pulling back from a position the Trump administration advanced last week. DOJ lawyers now cast the idea as in the early stages and dependent on approval of a new U.S. Postal Service rule for mail ballots, citing a memo that Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin signed earlier Monday.
The Secretary authorized DHS to continue preliminary conversations with USPS concerning potential data-sharing arrangements, and should USPS finalize its rulemaking process, consider working to advance potential coordination to the extent feasible and consistent with applicable law and privacy protections, the notice says.
Mullins memo, the Monday court filing says, more accurately reflects the current policy of the Administration with respect to the implementation of the executive order, reversing a Friday notice that said Homeland Security contemplates working to integrate the Postal Services voter data in an effort to monitor the flow of mail ballots and identify possible fraud. Fridays filing said Homeland Security would use the information to generate investigative leads.
https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2026/06/09/repub/homeland-security-retreats-on-plan-to-get-data-on-mail-in-voters/