ACLU, Common Cause Take on Trump Administration in Court to Protect Voters’ Data
Providence, RI — The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and ACLU of Rhode Island have intervened, on behalf of Common Cause, in a recently-filed lawsuit to prevent the Department of Justice from obtaining sensitive, non-public information contained in the Rhode Island state voter file.
The Department of Justice has requested Rhode Island’s entire non-public voter file, including the full names, addresses, dates of birth, and driver’s license numbers and/or social security number information. State officials offered to provide the data that is available to the public, but the Department of Justice sued the State rather than accept. The request is part of a reported effort to assemble a national voter database, which Congress has never authorized, and which could be used to try to disenfranchise voters. The federal government’s use of this private voter data would also make this sensitive data more vulnerable to hackers and scammers.
The groups seek to stop the federal government’s overreach and misuse of voters’ sensitive data, as the federal government does not have a proper purpose for requesting this data.
“Rhode Islanders deserve to have their sensitive personal information protected -- not abused by federal authorities,” said Ari Savitzky, senior staff attorney with the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project. “This voter data could be misused to justify large-scale voter purges based on faulty database matching techniques cooked up by election deniers. Federal overreach of this kind threatens voters’ privacy and their fundamental right to participate in our democracy.”
“Privacy is essential — especially as related to a right as fundamental as voting. The Department of Justice has no need for voters’ personal information,” said Steven Brown, executive director of the ACLU of RI. “This is why we’re intervening in this case: To protect the rights of Rhode Island voters, and to prevent the potential misuse of Rhode Islanders’ data.”
“This dangerous directive puts our sensitive information at risk simply so the Trump Administration can spread election lies,” said John Marion, Common Cause Rhode Island Executive Director. “Handing this data over to the federal government violates the law. Common Cause is fighting to keep Rhode Islanders safe from senseless data fraud and abuse.”
“Voters in Rhode Island and across the country deserve to know that their personal information is secure, protected, and used only for its intended purpose of maintaining accurate voter registration records,” said Maryam Jazini Dorcheh, Senior Director of Litigation at Common Cause. “We are committed to defending voters’ rights and privacy in Rhode Island and nationwide, and this case is one of many where we are stepping in to ensure those protections are upheld.”
A copy of the filing is here: https://assets.aclu.org/live/uploads/2025/12/Motion-to-Intervene-–-US-v.-Amore-1.pdf