PRESS RELEASE: Federal Court Rejects Trump-Vance Administrationâs Bid to Pause Ruling Blocking Unlawful SAVE System
Press Releases
PRESS RELEASE: Federal Court Rejects Trump-Vance Administrationâs Bid to Pause Ruling Blocking Unlawful SAVE System
July 10, 2026
Recent Actions in the Case Demonstrate that the Trump-Vance Administration Continues to Invade Privacy and Suppress Voting Rights
Washington, D.C. â A federal court has rejected the Trump-Vance administrationâs request to pause a landmark ruling blocking its unlawful expansion of the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program, allowing the decision to remain in effect while the case proceeds.
In the most recent decision, issued July 8, the court calls the governmentâs claims of harms âmanufactured,â says that the governmentâs arguments âmischaracterizedâ the courtâs prior conclusions, and says the government is âsomewhat audaciouslyâ trying to avoid the courtâs order by invoking an inapplicable order from a court in Florida.
The lawsuit, brought by EPIC, the League of Women Voters, League of Women Voters of Virginia, League of Women Voters of Louisiana, and individual voters, challenges the administrationâs expansion of SAVE to allow states to conduct bulk voter verification searches using Social Security information and other sensitive personal data, with frequently inaccurate results that have caused American citizensâ voter registrations to be wrongfully cancelled. Plaintiffs are represented by Democracy Forward, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), and Fair Elections Center.
On June 22, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia granted plaintiffsâ motion for summary judgment, ruling that the administrationâs expansion of SAVE is unlawful, violating the Social Security Act, Privacy Act, and Administrative Procedure Act.
The latest developments arise in part from a separate lawsuit filed by the State of Florida and several other states in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida. State of Florida and Florida Department of State, et al. v. DHSchallenged the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) over the functionality of the SAVE system and was resolved through a settlement agreement requiring DHS to maintain the new SAVE capabilities that the plaintiffs in the League of Women Voters case were already litigating in the District of Columbia, including Social Security number searches and bulk upload functionality.
After the D.C. court ruled those SAVE modifications unlawful, DHS disabled those features to comply with the judgment. Florida then won an order requiring enforcement of its settlement agreement, resulting in conflicting district court orders governing operation of the modified SAVE system.
DHS asked the D.C. court to stay its June 22 ruling while it appealed, arguing that the Florida order made compliance impossible. The court rejected that request on Wednesday, finding that DHS created its own predicament by entering into the Florida settlement while litigation challenging the legality of the SAVE expansion was already pending. The D.C. court concluded that the governmentâs current conflict was the product of its own litigation choices â not a basis for extraordinary relief.
Following the Florida courtâs enforcement order, the League of Women Voters and EPIC filed an emergency motion to intervene in the Florida case to defend the D.C. judgment. Meanwhile, DHS has appealed the June 22 decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and is again seeking to stay the D.C. district courtâs ruling pending appeal.
âThe court rightly rejected the governmentâs effort to keep its unlawfully bloated SAVE system alive through âgamesmanshipâ and procedural maneuvering,â said EPIC Deputy Director and Director of Enforcement John Davisson. âThe Trump-Vance administrationâs ploy to repurpose Americansâ Social Security data and conduct error-ridden mass screenings of voters is exactly the kind of mission creep that federal privacy laws are designed to prevent. The court has made that clear twice now. We will continue fighting to ensure that privacy laws mean what they say and that Americansâ personal information isnât weaponized against them.â
âThe Trump-Vance administration created this crisis by unlawfully expanding the SAVE system to include records about every American citizen, and then chose to deepen it by entering into a settlement agreement that directly conflicted with litigation already pending in federal court,â said Skye Perryman, President and CEO of Democracy Forward. âA federal court has now rejected the administrationâs attempt to escape the consequences of its own actions, recognizing that this predicament is one of the governmentâs own making â not a reason to keep an unlawful system in place. Americans should not have to sacrifice their privacy rights or risk their right to vote because the government ignored federal law and now wants the courts to rescue it from its own litigation strategy. We will continue defending this landmark judgment in the D.C. Circuit, in the related Florida proceedings, and wherever necessary to ensure the federal government cannot unlawfully repurpose Americansâ sensitive personal information.â
âAs the court said earlier this week, the governmentâs situation is entirely âself-inflicted,â and its litigation tactics âmake a mockery of separation of powers.â The order vacating the illegal modifications to SAVE remains, and we will persist in fighting to ensure the government complies with its legal obligations, which the court has already reaffirmed,â said Donald Sherman, President and CEO of CREW. âWe look forward to continuing to vigorously defend our clientsâ, their membersâ, and the American peopleâs privacy and voting rights against the Trump administrationâs repeated election sabotage efforts and contempt for court orders upholding the rule of law.â
The litigation will now continue before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit while proceedings related to the Florida enforcement order move forward.
Please contact[email protected] with requests for further comment.
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