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Judge dismisses Trump administration lawsuit over Michigan’s voter rolls

February 10, 2026

A federal judge dismissed the Department of Justice's lawsuit against Michigan over the state's refusal to provide an unredacted voter registration list. The DOJ had requested complete voter data from Michigan and nearly every other state as part of efforts to identify noncitizen voters, but Michigan only provided a redacted version to protect personally identifiable information under state and federal privacy laws. Judge Hala Y.

Who is affected

  • Michigan state government and Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson
  • Michigan registered voters whose personal information was being requested
  • U.S. Department of Justice
  • 24 other states plus Washington, D.C. that have been sued by the DOJ for similar reasons
  • California and Oregon (states with previously dismissed similar lawsuits)

What action is being taken

  • No explicit ongoing actions are currently described in the article. The lawsuit has been dismissed, and no active measures are mentioned as taking place at this time.

Why it matters

  • This ruling establishes an important legal precedent limiting the federal government's ability to access voters' personally identifiable information without clear statutory authority. The decision protects voter privacy by affirming that states are not required under existing federal election laws to hand over unredacted voter rolls to the Department of Justice. The ruling has broader implications for the 24 other states facing similar lawsuits and reinforces state authority over voter data privacy protections.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com