The Republican National Committee has officially run out of patience with New Jersey — and with Tahesha Way, the state’s Democrat secretary of state. After months of stonewalling and excuses, the RNC has been forced to take the state to court just to get answers to the most basic questions about how New Jersey maintains its voter rolls.
In a Monday announcement, RNC officials revealed they’d filed an election-integrity lawsuit against Way after she repeatedly refused to provide transparency on voter-roll maintenance — a requirement mandated by law. Instead of complying, she’s kept the whole process behind closed doors, raising even more questions about what the state is hiding.
“New Jerseyans deserve to know whether their voter rolls are accurate. Clean and transparent voter lists are essential for trust in our elections. The RNC is suing to obtain these records and ensure the state follows the law,” RNC Chairman Joe Gruters noted.
According to the RNC, they didn’t just ask once or twice — they asked 18 times for New Jersey to explain how it maintains its voter rolls. And 18 times Tahesha Way’s office slammed the door in their face. No transparency, no cooperation, not even a token acknowledgment.
The RNC argues this isn’t just bad governance — it’s a clear violation of federal law:
Section 8 of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 requires states to remove ineligible voters—such as those who have died or moved out of the jurisdiction—from the voter rolls. Under the act, states must permit the public to inspect records showing how voter rolls are maintained.
Earlier this year, the RNC sent records requests to election officials in 48 states and Washington, D.C., in an effort to obtain information on how each jurisdiction maintains the integrity of its voter rolls. They were specifically looking to obtain documents detailing this information, a request that was repeatedly denied by New Jersey. Of particular concern to the RNC was how voters who requested to be removed from voter rolls were handled.The Republican National Committee (RNC) has officially lost patience with New Jersey and Tahesha Way, the state’s Democratic Secretary of State. After months of evasion and excuses, the RNC has been compelled to take legal action against the state to get answers regarding the maintenance of its voter rolls.
In a Monday announcement, RNC officials revealed that they have filed an election-integrity lawsuit against Way after she repeatedly refused to provide transparency about how New Jersey maintains its voter rolls, a requirement mandated by law. Instead of complying, she has kept the entire process behind closed doors, raising further questions about what the state may be hiding.
“New Jerseyans deserve to know whether their voter rolls are accurate. Clean and transparent voter lists are essential for trust in our elections. The RNC is suing to obtain these records and ensure the state follows the law,” stated RNC Chairman Joe Gruters.
According to the RNC, their requests for information were not just made once or twice; they asked 18 times for New Jersey to clarify how it manages its voter rolls. Each time, Tahesha Way’s office denied their requests, offering no transparency, cooperation, or even a minimal acknowledgment.
The RNC argues that this is not only poor governance but also a clear violation of federal law. Earlier this year, the RNC sent records requests to election officials in 48 states and Washington, D.C., seeking information on maintaining the integrity of their voter rolls. Their requests for documentation were repeatedly denied by New Jersey. Of particular concern to the RNC was how the state handled voters who requested removal from the voter rolls.
It sure seems as those Ms. Way wants to keep that information locked away — which naturally raises the question: What is she hiding? If New Jersey’s voter rolls are being maintained properly, why the secrecy? Why refuse a straightforward request 18 consecutive times unless the answer is something she doesn’t want the public to see?
This latest lawsuit follows another the RNC filed back in March under New Jersey’s Open Public Records Act, after the state again refused to turn over basic voter-roll documentation. That lawsuit followed President Trump’s signing of an executive order “requiring states to use proof of U.S. citizenship for federal voter registration, setting Election Day as the uniform deadline for receiving ballots in federal elections, and conditioning federal election funding on compliance with those and other election-integrity rules.”
The RNC’s push to pry voter-roll information out of New Jersey isn’t happening in a vacuum — it’s part of a broader, state-by-state strategy to restore election integrity nationwide. Working in tandem with the Trump administration, the committee is taking a systematic approach: demand transparency, enforce the law, and hold officials accountable when they refuse to comply.
Expect more lawsuits. Expect more pressure. And expect the RNC to keep pushing until election integrity is not optional, but enforced — in every state, not just the ones that make transparency easy.
