Attorney General Mayes Joins Coalition Challenging Trump Administration's Attack on States' Fair Housing Laws
PHOENIX — Attorney General Kris Mayes joined a coalition of attorneys general filing a lawsuit challenging unlawful actions by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), including threats to withhold funding from state and local fair housing enforcement agencies for abiding by state laws and to impose illegal conditions on HUD funding. These actions threaten to weaken America's fair housing enforcement system and undermine states' ability to ensure equal access to housing. If unchallenged, discrimination in housing is almost certain to increase.
"Arizona's fair housing laws exist because our legislature passed them, and they exist for good reason," said Attorney General Mayes. "Housing discrimination is real, it harms real people, and these laws are how we hold bad actors accountable. The federal government cannot hold critical funding hostage to force states to abandon those protections, and we won't let it."
Sixty years ago, Congress enacted the Fair Housing Act to address pervasive housing discrimination. Congress also created a robust partnership between HUD and state and local agencies, known as the Fair Housing Assistance Program (FHAP), to enforce this landmark civil rights law in tandem with state fair housing laws. The FHAP has had strong bipartisan support in Congress and stable funding since it was established in 1980.
In their lawsuit being filed today, Attorney General Mayes and the attorneys general allege that the Trump administration is seeking to illegally undermine this partnership by attacking states' ability to combat housing discrimination under their own democratically enacted state laws.
Through the FHAP, HUD refers allegations of housing discrimination to state and local partner agencies for investigation and enforcement. These agencies receive HUD funding, which they use to process housing discrimination complaints, train staff, and support community outreach and education.
In September 2025, HUD issued guidance to Arizona's FHAP agency and partner agencies in other states, threatening to decertify them from the program and cut off funding unless they stop enforcing crucial protections against housing discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, language, criminal records and source of income. The guidance also bars agencies from pursuing claims targeting housing practices that may appear neutral but, in reality, are discriminatory and have a disparate impact on certain populations.
In addition to the threat to decertify partner agencies, HUD is attempting to impose vague, ideologically motivated, and unlawful conditions on program funding.
In their complaint, Attorney General Mayes and the attorneys general assert that the administration's actions will raise the costs of enforcing state and federal fair housing laws in their states. They also argue that HUD's vague conditions will sow confusion over enforcement.
The attorneys general note that this unlawful ultimatum comes after HUD gutted its own fair housing enforcement capabilities by slashing its headcount and significantly reducing the number of housing discrimination cases it charges. The agency also fired employee whistleblowers after they publicly sounded the alarm about its decimation of fair housing enforcement.
The coalition's lawsuit alleges that HUD's guidance violates the Spending Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the federal Administrative Procedure Act, which governs how federal agencies implement rule changes.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul are leading the coalition. Joining Bonta and Raoul in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.
A copy of the filing is available.