Democratic attorneys general sue Trump over order to restrict mail voting
More than 20 Democratic attorneys general are suing Donald Trump over his executive order seeking to restrict mail voting. The order directs the US Postal Service to refrain from sending ballots to individuals not on a pre-approved list created by the Department of Homeland Security, based on citizenship records.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedMore than 20 Democratic attorneys general are suing Donald Trump over his executive order seeking to restrict mail voting. The order directs the US Postal Service to refrain from sending ballots to individuals not on a pre-approved list created by the Department of Homeland Security, based on citizenship records. States not complying could face funding cuts and investigations. The attorneys general argue the order is an unconstitutional overreach into state election authority and disenfranchises voters, creating confusion in election systems. This lawsuit joins others filed by Democratic leaders and civil rights groups. The Trump administration claims the order aims to secure elections, while repeatedly alleging, without evidence, that mail-in voting leads to fraud.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedNearly a third of the country voted by mail in the 2024 presidential election.
Only Democrat politicians and operatives would be upset about lawful efforts to secure American elections.
The attorneys general called the order an unconstitutional interference into state elections.
Trump directed the US Postal Service to abstain from sending mail-in ballots to people not on a pre-ordained list.
Democratic attorneys general filed a lawsuit challenging Trump’s executive order to restrict who can vote by mail.