The Trump administration has filed a lawsuit against a Georgia county seeking access to 2020 voting records, as Donald Trump continues to claim the presidential election was stolen from him.
The Justice Department’s lawsuit asks the state to turn over “all used and void ballots, all ballot stubs, signature envelopes, and digital files of corresponding envelopes from the 2020 general election in Fulton County.”
The government accuses the county of violating the Civil Rights Act after local officials said the ballots were sealed and could not be submitted without a court order.
Trump narrowly lost the state of Georgia to Joe Biden in 2020, one of several losses that cost him the White House.
According to the lawsuit, the Justice Department sent a subpoena to Fulton County election officials in October demanding election materials, citing the need to investigate “compliance with federal election law.”
In a statement Friday, Deputy Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon said states must protect against “vote dilution.”
“At this Department of Justice, we will not allow states to jeopardize the integrity and effectiveness of elections by refusing to comply with our federal election laws,” he said. “If states fail in their duty to protect the integrity of the ballot, we will do so.”
The county did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
After losing the 2020 election to Biden, Trump alleged widespread fraud. Numerous courts rejected legal challenges brought by his campaigns and allies.
Georgia, particularly Fulton County and the metro Atlanta region, became a focal point of Trump’s challenges to the 2020 election results.
After the election, Trump called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and told him: “I just want to find 11,780 votes, one more than we have. Because we won the state.”
Raffensperger, whose office oversees Georgia elections and certifies the results, confirmed that Biden won the state even after multiple reviews.
His office declined to comment on the justice department’s lawsuit.
It was later in Fulton County that Trump was criminally charged in connection with a plot to overturn the state’s election results.
Fulton County Prosecutor Fani Willis filed a failed racketeering case against him, alleging he led a criminal conspiracy to undermine Georgia’s election results. Trump pleaded not guilty to the charges in August 2023.
A judge dismissed the case earlier this month, after a series of procedural blows hampered the prosecution and Trump’s return to the White House in 2025 put the case on ice.
The Georgia election interference case was once considered the most threatening of Trump’s four criminal indictments because he could not pardon himself from state-level charges if he returned to office.





























