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Federal Voter Data Mandate Sparks Security Fears

A Justice Department directive requiring states to cross-reference voter rolls against federal immigration databases is fueling concerns over mass disenfranchisement. As the 2026 midterms approach, experts warn that the push to centralize sensitive records through the SAVE program creates unprecedented security risks and threatens the integrity of state-run elections.

June 18, 2026221 reads0

The Department of Homeland Security’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program, originally established in 1987 to check eligibility for public benefits, is now the center of a federal effort to identify noncitizen voters. The Department of Justice has begun demanding that states hand over comprehensive voter files, including Social Security numbers and driver’s license data, to be vetted against these federal records. The mandate requires states to purge any individuals flagged as ineligible within a 45-day window.

Legal scholars argue the initiative oversteps federal boundaries. Eileen O’Connor, senior counsel at the Brennan Center, describes the intervention into state-level election administration as both unprecedented and disturbing, noting that the federal government lacks the specialized expertise required to manage such sensitive electoral data. Conversely, DOJ spokesperson Natalie Baldassarre maintains that the agency is simply exercising its authority under the National Voter Registration Act to ensure voter rolls remain accurate and contain only eligible participants.

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