Communiqué de presse
Pam Bondi, procureure générale de Trump, critique la direction du ministère de la Justice en matière de droits de vote

WASHINGTON-La procureure générale du président Trump, Pam Bondi, a limogé l'équipe dirigeante de la Section du vote de la Division des droits civiques du ministère de la Justice et ordonné le classement de toutes les affaires en cours. La Section du vote est chargée de faire respecter les lois fédérales protégeant le droit de vote, notamment la loi sur le droit de vote, la loi sur le vote par correspondance des citoyens en uniforme et des citoyens d'outre-mer, la loi nationale sur l'inscription des électeurs, la loi Help America Vote et les lois sur les droits civiques.
Common Cause’s Senior Vice President of Policy and Litigation, Omar Noureldin, served as Senior Counsel to the Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights during the Biden-Harris administration.
Statement of Omar Noureldin, Common Cause Senior Vice President, Policy and Litigation
The Trump administration’s gutting of the Voting Section of the Civil Rights Division is doing profound and lasting damage to the protection of voting rights in the United States. The removal and reassignment of the section’s leadership and the dismissal of cases are themselves attacks on the voting rights of every American.
Attorney General Pam Bondi’s systematic removal of career attorneys and staff is not confined to the voting section – it extends to the entire Civil Rights Division. The upheaval and loss of experience will leave the division unable to enforce the nation’s civil rights laws.
As a former presidential political appointee at DOJ, I have the utmost respect for the Civil Rights Division’s career attorneys and staff. I saw firsthand the critical work they perform in ensuring the civil rights of every American are protected.
The mission of the Civil Rights Division is not, and has never been, partisan. Its mission is to enforce the nation’s civil rights laws impartially and vigorously. That is a job the division has done admirably across administrations for more than 60 years.
It is critical that the current administration reverse course in order to ensure that the civil rights laws passed by Congress are enforced effectively. And Congress must maintain vigilant oversight of DOJ and ensure the Civil Rights Division is adequately funded.