Arizona joins legal battle against Trump mail-in voting order

Arizona has joined a coalition of 23 states suing to block a Trump administration order on mail-in voting, arguing that the U.S. Constitution grants states the authority to run elections. The lawsuit seeks to prevent the federal government from interfering with Arizona's 35-year-old mail-in voting law.
Arizona has joined a lawsuit against the Trump administration's order on mail-in voting. The state argues that the order illegally interferes with its mail-in voting law. The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts by a coalition of 23 states. Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes has filed or joined 40 cases against the Trump administration since 2024. The case seeks to reaffirm that elections are managed by states, not the federal government. Arizona has used mail-in voting for over 100 years and has a system in place to ensure ballot security.
This content was automatically generated and/or translated by AI. It may contain inaccuracies. Please refer to the original sources for verification.