Judge HALTS Trump’s Executive Order

A federal judge in Boston on Thursday blocked President Donald Trump’s executive order overhauling mail-in voting rules, declaring key provisions unconstitutional and preventing their enforcement ahead of the November 3, 2026, midterm elections that will determine control of Congress.

U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani, an appointee of Democratic President Barack Obama, sided with a coalition of twenty-three states and the District of Columbia, whose attorneys general and governors argued that Trump had stepped far beyond his constitutional authority by attempting to reshape how states run their elections. The 37-page ruling found that major portions of Trump’s order were legally void — not merely overreaching, but fundamentally incompatible with the constitutional separation of powers.

“The Constitution does not grant the President any specific powers over elections,” Talwani wrote in her ruling.

What Trump’s Order Would Have Done

Trump signed the executive order on March 31, 2026, directing the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security Administration to compile a nationwide registry of verified U.S. citizens over 18 — effectively a federal voter eligibility database. The order also directed the U.S. Postal Service to deliver mail-in ballots exclusively to voters who appeared on those federally approved lists, giving USPS an unprecedented gatekeeping role in American elections.

The stakes sharpened Wednesday when U.S. Postmaster General David Steiner told Congress that USPS would refuse to deliver ballots in states whose officials declined to hand over their voter data to the federal government — a stark public declaration that turned a proposed rule into an explicit threat against state election administrators.

Talwani was unconvinced that any of this fell within the executive branch’s reach. She found that Congress, through the Help America Vote Act of 2002, had already established a framework requiring states to maintain their own voter rolls — and nowhere in that law, or any other federal statute, had Congress authorized the federal government to build its own parallel voting database. The USPS, she ruled, similarly had no statutory footing to issue binding regulations on who receives a mail ballot.

States’ Authority at the Center of the Ruling

At the heart of Talwani’s 37-page ruling was a straightforward constitutional argument: states, not the federal executive, hold the power to determine who is eligible to vote. The plaintiffs — representing jurisdictions spanning from the Southwest through the Midwest to the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, such as Arizona, California, Michigan, Nevada, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin — had argued that rushing to comply with Trump’s order would force states to upend their election systems in a matter of months, creating chaos and almost certainly blocking eligible voters from casting ballots.

The injunction applies to this year’s election cycle. Talwani granted the administration’s motion to dismiss legal challenges pertaining to future elections, finding those claims not yet ripe for review.

Democratic officials were quick to celebrate. New York Attorney General Letitia James called the decision a protection of the democratic foundation itself, saying the ruling shielded the right to vote from what she described as another unlawful attack. Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold said the ruling confirmed a principle she argued had never been in serious dispute: that states, not the president, run elections.

A String of Defeats for Trump’s Election Orders

Thursday’s ruling arrived one day after a separate Boston judge permanently blocked significant portions of an earlier executive order Trump had signed in 2025 — one that would have required proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote and barred states from counting mail-in ballots received after Election Day. Together, the two rulings represent back-to-back judicial rebukes of the administration’s push to assert federal dominance over election administration, a campaign rooted in Trump’s years-long and repeatedly debunked claim that his 2020 defeat resulted from widespread voter fraud.

Courts have now blocked major portions of both executive orders. The legal pressure has mounted even as Trump has made passage of the SAVE America Act — a sweeping package of federal voting restrictions — his top legislative priority. That effort suffered its own setback Wednesday, when Trump abruptly canceled a signing ceremony for separate bipartisan legislation on housing costs, stunning lawmakers who had hoped to use the event as a public showcase.

White House Signals an Appeal

The administration pushed back on the ruling without conceding its legal fight. White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said the administration was “confident that we will ultimately prevail.” The White House had previously secured a favorable ruling from a judge in Washington, D.C., who declined to block the order’s enforcement at that stage, citing the fact that agencies had not yet fully implemented it.

An appeal of Talwani’s ruling is widely expected, though the November 3 midterms loom close enough that any appellate timeline will face intense scrutiny. The administration has been ordered to submit a compliance report to the court within the week, detailing the steps it has already taken — or will take — to conform to the injunction.

Sources: HuffPost | Votebeat | Democracy Docket | PBS News

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