Litigation tracker for Trump policies
A new real‑time litigation tracker consolidates major legal challenges to Trump‑era executive orders and immigration measures—offering a centralized resource for practitioners monitoring detention, denaturalization, and procedural cases. The tracker aggregates filings and status updates across key impact litigation. (justsecurity.org)
Just Security published the living, searchable Litigation Tracker on March 26, 2026 and frames it as a continually updated resource for lawsuits challenging Trump administration executive actions. (justsecurity.org) The project’s major relaunch on August 6, 2025 added case-level capture back to January 20, 2025 and introduced real-time status tallies and advanced filters that label cases as “Blocked,” “On Appeal,” or “Awaiting Court Ruling.” (justsecurity.org) The tracker’s taxonomy and tags include immigration-specific buckets such as detention, denaturalization, and birthright‑citizenship disputes, and Just Security maintains an Immigration tag with dedicated analysis and summaries. (justsecurity.org) Just Security has used the tracker to surface immigration enforcement developments reported elsewhere — for example, its Early Edition cited internal guidance that USCIS was asked to supply 100–200 denaturalization cases per month to the Office of Immigration Litigation. (justsecurity.org) The site records major immigration-related dockets such as Trump v. CASA, where Just Security’s analysis flagged the Supreme Court’s procedural ruling as increasing the risk that birthright‑citizenship challenges could create statelessness in parts of the country. (justsecurity.org) The Just Security tracker sits alongside other public trackers — Lawfare’s tracker lists 233 active cases and an Alien Enemies Act “state of play” table, and the Associated Press runs an interactive lawsuits tracker that maps hundreds of suits against the administration. (lawfaremedia.org) (apnews.com) Just Security states the tracker is updated each weekday with docket changes and offers a “Today on Just Security” newsletter for daily digests, while inviting submissions about missing cases via lte@justsecurity.org. (justsecurity.org)