CREW filed amicus briefs on behalf of a bipartisan group of former secretaries of state in three cases challenging President Trump’s executive order attempting to exert federal control over elections. 

The amicus briefs explain that the Constitution establishes that states play an irreplaceable and primary role in election regulation and administration—and that the president has no standalone power to regulate and administer elections. Therefore, Trump’s executive order asserting presidential authority over elections violates the key democratic principle of the separation of powers laid out in the Constitution.

Trump’s executive order oversteps his authority by ordering the Election Assistance Commission to unilaterally add new requirements to the federal voter registration form, taking federal control over some voter roll list maintenance, requiring the review and potential decertification of certain voting systems and prohibiting states from processing absentee and mail-in ballots received after Election Day. 

As the briefs state: “Although Amici may not always have agreed about what constitute the best election policies, Amici nonetheless share a common commitment to ensuring that elections are free and fair, and Amici are unified in their understanding of states’ pivotal role in enacting and executing election laws, as set forth in the U.S. Constitution.” 

On June 13, 2025, California, Nevada, and seventeen other states were granted a preliminary injunction by a Massachusetts federal court, which cited the secretaries’ brief several times, including quoting in agreement the secretaries’ argument that “[a]llowing the President to change election rules and procedures on [his] whim whenever [he] see[s] fit, without any input from election administrators charged with executing those rules and without the checks and balances provided by Congress, would be equivalent to dropping an anvil onto the carefully balanced scales of justice.”

On January 9, 2026, a district court in Washington granted judgment on numerous claims in favor of the States of Washington and Oregon and against the Trump Administration’s effort to exert federal control over elections. In concluding the President violated the separation of powers, the Court relied on and quoted CREW’s amicus brief: “As noted by amici Bipartisan Former State Secretaries of State, ‘There is no understanding of executive power that grants the President the authority to control the day-to-day actions of the [Election Assistance Commission].'”

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