DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Four Republican-led states agreed to settle over access to , ending a dispute that began with the Biden administration in .
Officials in Florida, Indiana, Iowa and Ohio entered the settlement with the Department of Homeland Security and Secretary Kristi Noem roughly a year after the states individually sued the agency under President . They had alleged the previous administration was withholding information about citizenship status that they needed to determine whether thousands of registered voters were actually .
Each of the states could soon run searches for thousands of voters using names, birthdays and Social Security numbers through the federal government's Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements program. It has been significantly upgraded under the Trump administration. In turn, the settlement reached Friday says the states may share driver's license records with the Department of Homeland Security "to assist in improving and modernizing” its database.
The information sharing is likely to be a focal point of the 2026 midterm elections. Voting rights groups have already sued the administration over the expanded program, known as SAVE, arguing that the recent updates could result in eligible voters being unlawfully purged from voter lists. Separately, President Donald Trump's Department of Justice has asked at least half the states for their complete voter rolls, a request that have questioned out of concern that the data would be provided to DHS.
Voting by noncitizens is illegal in federal elections and can lead to felony charges and deportation. show it is s to register to vote and that they actually cast a ballot.
Still, before the 2024 election, without evidence that noncitizens in large enough numbers to . Many emphasize that even one instance of a noncitizen voting illegally is too many.
The SAVE program, which has been around for decades, is operated by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, a branch of DHS. It has been widely used by local and state officials to check the citizenship status of people applying for public benefits by running them through a variety of federal databases.
DHS and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency updated the SAVE program earlier this year, according to public announcements. It is now free for election officials, allows searches for voters by the thousands instead of one at a time and no longer requires agencies to search using DHS-issued identification numbers. When a name, date of birth and government-issued number is entered, the database will return initial verification of citizenship status within 48 hours, according to the settlement.
As part of the settlement, Florida, Indiana, Iowa and Ohio will develop a memorandum of understanding with the federal government within 90 days on use of the SAVE program. The settlement also dictates that they will negotiate a new information-sharing agreement for “for the purpose of improving” the SAVE system. That may include providing DHS with 1,000 "randomly selected driver's license records from their state" within 90 days.
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