Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be mostly sunny with a high of 82. Sunrise is 5:20 and sunset is 8:24 for 15 hours 2 minutes of daylight. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 96.9 percent of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 1953, Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay become the first people to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
In over thirty attempts, the Trump Administration, through the Department of Justice it so tightly manipulates, has sought the voter rolls of state governments. One of those attempts was to receive Wisconsin’s unredacted voter list. In December, the Wisconsin Elections Commission denied the federal government access to our state’s list:
The Wisconsin Elections Commission on Thursday denied a demand from the U.S. Department of Justice for the state’s full voter registration list, including personally identifiable information such as dates of birth, driver’s licenses and Social Security numbers.
At a special meeting Thursday afternoon and in a letter sent in response to the DOJ demand, WEC stated that Wisconsin law explicitly prevents the commission from sharing the personal information of voters.
“The U.S. DOJ is simply asking the commission to do something the commission is explicitly forbidden by Wisconsin law to do,” commissioner Don Millis said.
See Henry Redman, Elections commission denies U.S. DOJ demand for voter personal information, Wisconsin Examiner, December 12, 2025.
Trump’s Department of Justice then sued to gain access to Wisconsinites’ voter information. A federal court dismissed that DOJ lawsuit this month:
The Wisconsin Elections Commission refused to provide that documentation, citing state privacy laws. That prompted the U.S. Department of Justice to sue, arguing that it needed the unredacted information to ensure that Wisconsin was complying with the federal Help America Vote Act and the National Voter Registration Act. It also argued that the Elections Commission was required to provide the list under Title III of the Civil Rights Act of 1960.
On Thursday [5.21.26], however, U.S. District James Peterson dismissed that suit with prejudice.
“The court agrees that a voter registration list is not a record subject to production under Title III,” Peterson wrote. “So it will dismiss the complaint on that ground without considering defendants’ other arguments.”
[…]
The Trump administration has filed similar lawsuits against 29 other states and the District of Columbia. So far, federal courts have dismissed eight of those suits on the merits, according to the State Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Law School. That includes a case against Maine, which was also dismissed Thursday.
See Sarah Lehr, Judge rejects Trump administration’s attempt to get unredacted Wisconsin voter registration list, Wisconsin Public Radio, May 21, 2026.
See also United States v. Wis. Elections Comm’n, No. 25-cv-1036-jdp, slip op. (W.D. Wis. May 21, 2026):
This case was dismissed with prejudice (where dismissal with prejudice means, generally, that a dismissal is treated as a final adjudication on the merits for claim-preclusion purposes). Cases that reach a final adjudication on the merits cannot be refiled again merely because a plaintiff wants a different result. In this opinion and order, the court found that
The Seventh Circuit [the appellate court with jurisdiction over this trial court] has cautioned against dismissing a complaint without leave to amend, but the court may do so if any amendment would be futile. Indep. Tr. Corp. v. Stewart Info. Servs. Corp., 665 F.3d 930, 943 (7th Cir. 2012). The court has concluded that Title III
does not even apply to the government’s request for Wisconsin’s voter registration list, so there is no way that it could amend its complaint to state a claim for relief. The government’s complaint will be dismissed with prejudice and without leave to amend.
Because there was no acceptable argument the federal DOJ could have made to cure the deficiencies of its complaint, the case was dismissed without an (unwarranted) opportunity to amend.
It’s not enough — in a free society under law — for government to want something. It’s not enough for Donald J. Trump to demand something. Government must justify its wants and demands.
This republic under the rule of law is more than an aged man gratifying his appetites at a vulgar club in South Florida.
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Upcoming posts (in no decided order): A Whitewater Comparative Analysis, Whitewater’s Workforce, and Outcome-Driven Argumentation.
Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin rocket explodes during test on launch pad:



