Skip to content

Judicial Watch, Inc. is a conservative, non-partisan educational foundation, which promotes transparency, accountability and integrity in government, politics and the law.

Judicial Watch, Inc. is a conservative, non-partisan educational foundation, which promotes transparency, accountability and integrity in government, politics and the law.

Because no one
is above the law!

Donate

In The News

Los Angeles County agrees to purge up to 1.5 million voters from its rolls in settlement

Los Angeles County has agreed to conduct a purge of its voting rolls, in a move that could strip perhaps 1.5 million inactive voters from the lists of those eligible to cast ballots.

The county made the deal in a settlement last week with Judicial Watch, a conservative public interest firm, saying that under a recent Supreme Court ruling, it has a duty to remove names of people who appear to have either died, moved from the county or lost interest in voting.

The county committed to mailing hundreds of thousands of voters already deemed inactive to see whether they are still eligible voters, and to removing names of people who don’t respond to notices and who miss two subsequent federal elections. The county also agreed to try to weed out dead people still on the rolls.


Related

Judicial Watch Sues Chicago Mayor for Records on Pledge to Resist Trump’s Mass Deportation…

Press Releases | January 23, 2025
(Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch announced today it sued Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson for records regarding his vow to resist the Trump administration’s mass deportation and othe...

Nearly 400 non-citizens voted in DC's 2024 general election: Judicial Watch

In The News | January 22, 2025
From Just the News: Nearly 400 non-citizens voted in Washington, D.C.’s 2024 general election, according to public records, Judicial Watch reported on Tuesday. In response to...

Trump slams Biden for pardoning Fauci, Milley and Jan. 6 committee staffers in final…

In The News | January 22, 2025
From New York Post: Biden faced swift backlash from Republicans over the spate of preemptive pardons, which was somewhat muted by Trump’s forthcoming inauguration. “Ask yourself th...