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Home » The Justice Department Has Destroyed Its Voting Rights Section
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The Justice Department Has Destroyed Its Voting Rights Section

By News Room29 April 20264 Mins Read
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The Justice Department Has Destroyed Its Voting Rights Section
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When a new administration moves to Washington, DC, there are always changes in policy priorities and personnel. Alex, a lawyer in the Department of Justice’s Voting Section, had survived Donald Trump’s first term, and thought he could make it through the second.

Within hours of the president’s inauguration, he knew he had misjudged the situation.

“I was just wrong,” he says. “It was wildly different than the first Trump administration. There was just a sense that this was not going to be the same. And then in the Voting Section, what happened is they just started dismissing cases.”

The Voting Section was established in the agency’s Civil Rights Division following the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965 to ensure every American had an equal right to vote.

Alex, whose name has been changed to protect his identity, is one of dozens of lawyers who has been ousted from it since Trump’s return to the White House.

There were around 30 attorneys in the Voting Section when Trump was inaugurated in January 2025. Three months later, only two remained. The departing lawyers have since been replaced by half a dozen new hires with little federal court experience who have made a litany of basic errors in court filings. They have also appeared more than willing to comply with Trump’s anti-voting directives, filing dozens of lawsuits in a bid to force states to hand over unredacted voter rolls.

WIRED spoke to a dozen experts and former Voting Section lawyers about the wholesale destruction of the Justice Department’s Voting Section under Trump. Many spoke on the condition of anonymity due to fear of retaliation from the Trump administration.

As the November midterms loom, multiple sources tell WIRED that the damage done to the DOJ’s Voting Section may be irreversible. They worry that the ultimate goal is to provide Trump with so-called evidence to wrest control of elections from the states. “I think long-term, it’s about generating fodder to challenge or undermine elections,” says Alex, who worked at the Voting Section for many years.

“They’ve turned what was previously the crown jewel of the Civil Rights Division, the Voting Section, into a weapon against voters,” Michelle Kanter Cohen, policy director and senior counsel at the Fair Elections Center, tells WIRED. “This used to be a section that enforced people’s voting rights, that worked against intimidation, that enforced federal voting laws meant to protect people from discrimination and meant to make voting fair and accessible. It is being turned into a political tool to further conspiracy theories of the Trump administration.”

Former lawyers from the Voting Section agree. “I spent eight years in the Voting Section as a trial attorney doing what was the bread-and-butter work of the section ever since it was created, which was enforcing the Voting Rights Act and the other federal statutes that protect the right to vote,” Eileen O’Connor, who is now senior counsel at the nonprofit Brennan Center for Justice, tells WIRED. “The work that they’re doing now is the opposite.”

The White House did not respond to requests for comment about the new Voting Section lawyers, but spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told WIRED that “the Civil Rights Act, National Voting Rights Act, and Help America Vote Act all give the Department of Justice full authority to ensure states comply with federal election laws, which mandate accurate state voter rolls.”

Voting Rights

In the days and weeks after the 2020 presidential election, Trump sought to weaponize the Justice Department by appointing special counsels to investigate election conspiracy theories. It didn’t work. At every turn, officials and political appointees at the department pushed back, even threatening mass resignations.

Now Trump is once again seeking to use the power of the Justice Department to undermine trust in the election process. This time around, sources tell WIRED, there is no one pushing back.

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