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Outline of the State of California overlaid with pictures of a person holding a sign saying "Due process for EVERYONE" and the scales of justice

The Latest

Resource
Words "The Defend Democracy Tour" overlaid on a background of pink and blue and purple shooting stars

Defend Democracy Tour

Throughout the spring and summer of 2026, ACLU NorCal executive director Abdi Soltani is touring Northern California to highlight and celebrate the ways people are stepping up to defend democracy in its hour of need. We invite ACLU members, partners, and friends to join us at an event near you.
News & Commentary
Staff from ACLU NorCal, Cal Action, and Common Cause hold signs at the Capitol saying "Stop Voter Suppression"

Fighting the Voter Suppression Ballot Initiative

With democracy under attack, the balance of power in Congress up for grabs, and the Trump administration determined to make it harder to vote, the midterm election is shaping up to be one of the most consequential—and contentious—in recent history.
Resource
Graphic with words "Vote Local"

2026 Voter Guide

California's 2026 Primary Election is Tuesday, June 2. The 2026 General Election is Tuesday, November 3. Get ready to vote!
Court Case
people at the CA state capitol holding signs that say "keep communities whole" and "keep families together"

Mullin v. Dahlia Doe

On April 29, 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Mullin v. Dahlia Doe, a case challenging the Trump administration’s attempt to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for thousands of Syrian immigrants living and working legally in the United States. The case could affect the future of the entire TPS program, which has been a target of the Trump administration and its openly racist mass deportation agenda. TPS is a program established by Congress in 1990 to protect individuals who cannot safely return to their home country due to war, natural disaster, or other emergencies. TPS holders are mothers, fathers, workers, and contributing members of their communities. They rely on this humanitarian protection regime for safety. The Supreme Court’s ruling will impact not only Syrian TPS holders but will also affect whether the Trump administration can move forward with its actions seeking to strip legal status from many others. There are 1.3 million individuals from 17 countries designated for TPS. At the time the Supreme Court will be hearing this case, the Trump administration has terminated TPS for 13 countries—despite ongoing wars and undisputed humanitarian crises. Alongside our co-counsel the International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP), Muslim Advocates, and Van Der Hout LLP, the ACLU of Northern California represents seven Syrian nationals with TPS or pending applications in Mullin v. Dahlia Doe, a class action lawsuit originally filed in October 2025. Cancelling TPS designation for Syria would subject nearly 6,100 Syrian TPS holders, along with 800 Syrians with pending applications, to immigrant detention and possible deportation to an unsafe country. The plaintiffs argue that the DHS Secretary does not have the legal authority to unilaterally override the TPS statute enacted by Congress, and that it is the role of the judiciary to review the government’s legally dubious actions.

Press Releases

Court Rules Fresno City Council Violated Open Meetings Law By Conducting Budget Deliberations in Secret

Violations occurred for years, without public notice or the opportunity for residents to attend or participate

Canadian Trump Critic Sues to Stop Google from Sharing Personal Information with Department of Homeland Security

DHS unlawfully attempted to obtain personal information, including location and physical movements, of Canadian citizen

Legal Teams React to SCOTUS Arguments on Cases Challenging Termination of TPS for Haiti and Syria

The Supreme Court's decision could also impact more than 1.3 million TPS holders from all 17 TPS-designated countries, as the administration is asking to make TPS decision-making unreviewable by the court system.