Escalating Tensions Over Voter Rolls: A Minnesota Perspective
Democratic state election officials in Minnesota are sounding the alarm over a recent letter from the Justice Department, viewing it as a significant escalation in what they perceive as an attempt by the Trump administration to meddle in state election processes. Several officials have raised concerns that this could be a precursor to the administration leveraging immigration enforcement to sway the outcome of November’s midterm elections.
The officials are perplexed by the Trump administration’s relentless pursuit of access to state voter information. They refuse to comply, asserting to POLITICO that these requests are part of a broader strategy by the administration to insert itself into the electoral process at the state level.
Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a Democrat, has found himself at the forefront of this issue after Attorney General Pam Bondi sent a letter to Governor Tim Walz. In it, she suggested that one condition for restoring “law and order” amidst the administration’s aggressive immigration policies would be for Minnesota to relinquish its voter rolls to the federal government.
As one of two dozen states, along with the District of Columbia, facing legal action from the administration, Minnesota has steadfastly rejected this request, resulting in an unprecedented legal showdown between state election officials and the Justice Department.
“To me, this seems to be a project in service of the president’s longstanding but false narrative that elections nationwide are being rigged,” Simon remarked, sharing his perspective with POLITICO. “It appears this project serves that narrative, but that’s merely my interpretation.”
Simon noted that he has yet to receive a response from the Trump administration following his reply to Bondi’s letter. “This was already a dispute, but it was one being contested where it rightfully belongs—within a court of law,” he stated.
Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, also a Democrat running for reelection, characterized the letter to Minnesota officials as “extortion,” suggesting that the implications extend far beyond mere voter rolls.
“The voter roll issue is not simply about the lists themselves. There’s something larger at play,” Fontes commented during a gathering of secretaries of state in Washington. “These requests are like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, and we’re being told a narrative that doesn’t add up,” he added.
This unusual demand for access to state voter rolls is part of a yearlong initiative by the Trump administration, which claims its goal is to ensure compliance with federal voter registration practices and protect election integrity. The White House has sought voter records from nearly every state, including Washington, D.C., amidst Trump’s repeated assertions that the 2020 presidential election was “rigged.”
The White House contends it is acting within its rights under established legislation like the Civil Rights Act. “The Civil Rights Act, National Voting Rights Act, and Help America Vote Act grant the Department of Justice comprehensive authority to ensure states adhere to federal election laws, which demand accurate voter rolls. President Trump is dedicated to ensuring Americans have complete confidence in the electoral process, which includes maintaining error-free and current voter rolls devoid of unlawfully registered non-citizen voters,” stated White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson.
As of now, the Justice Department has not responded to POLITICO’s request for comment.
According to the Brennan Center, at least 11 states have acquiesced to the administration’s requests. Wyoming, for instance, has complied, with its Republican Secretary of State, Chuck Gray, expressing dismay at Democrats’ refusal to engage in what he terms routine maintenance of voter rolls. “We’ve been conducting regular voter list maintenance, which is widely supported for ensuring the cleanliness of voter lists,” he stated.
The Justice Department has filed lawsuits against the 24 states—most, although not all, led by Democrats—that have resisted complying, primarily citing concerns about the potential exposure of sensitive voter information.
“I worry that individuals may feel at risk if the Department of Justice gains access to voter rolls,” expressed Maine Democratic Secretary of State Shenna Bellows. “This Justice Department has weaponized its authority to target individuals based on identity and political affiliation,” she added.
Uzoma Nkwonta, a partner at Elias Law Group, which represents several states in legal battles concerning the voter roll demands, described the initiative as yet another instance of federal overreach. “The expectation from DOJ officials that they will remove hundreds of thousands of individuals from the rolls once they obtain this data should raise significant concerns,” Nkwonta emphasized, noting that maintaining voter registration lists is fundamentally a state responsibility, not a federal one.

