CONTACT:[email protected]DATE:March 8, 2026
A federal judge has ruled that the State of Missouri must allow a voter’s federal election complaint based on Unite4Freedom analysis to proceed under the Help America Vote Act (HAVA), ordering the Missouri Secretary of State to accept the complaint, conduct a formal hearing, and issue a written determination within 90 days.
The decision comes after the State previously rejected the complaint based on a Missouri regulation requiring complaints to be filed within 30 days after election certification. The court ruled thatstate procedural rules cannot be used to block federally protected rights established by Congress under HAVA.
The court’s order requires the Secretary of State to process the complaint through the federal HAVA complaint procedure, including a hearing on the record and a written determination. The court also orderedpreservationof key election system records while the complaint is investigated, includingstatewide voter registration database records, voter history records, audit logs, and related election system data.These records may be relevant to determining whether election systems are operating in compliance with federal requirements.
Importantly, the court stated that the plaintiff obtained the full relief requested in the complaint and that the court will retain jurisdiction for 90 days to ensure compliance with the order.
The HAVA complaint filed by the plaintiff centers around a simple analysis in Unite4Freedom’s Election Validity Scorecard demonstrating that the state’s certified vote tallies from the 2022 and 2024 did not match the EAC vote tally or the state’s voter history records.
HAVA § 303(a)(1)(A) requires each state to implement a“single uniform, official, centralized, interactive computerized statewide voter registration list”maintained at the state level with a unique identifier for every single legally registered voter. § 303(a)(1)(A) further requires that this single statewide list serve astheofficial list for the conduct of all federal elections in the state. If different “official” channels produce different totals for the same election, the State is not operating off one authoritative list.
The ruling does not determine whether any election law violations occurred. Instead,“This case is about ensuring that federal election law is followed,”said plaintiff, Connie Kramer. “Congress created a process under the Help America Vote Act so that citizens can raise concerns about election administration and receive a formal hearing and determination. The court confirmed that states cannot block that federal process with procedural technicalities.
The court also emphasized that the ruling does not address the underlying merits of the allegations but ensures that the federally required process will occur. “This ruling reinforces a simple principle,” the plaintiff added. “Federal election law applies to every state. When Congress created a complaint process for violations of HAVA, it meant for that process to be accessible to citizens.”
While the decision applies directly to Missouri, the ruling carries potential national implications because the Help America Vote Act establishes uniform federal requirements for election administration across all states.
Source: The Gateway Pundit