June 2026 formal report · Version 1.2 public model

June 2026 deepened the Red Zone again.

June did not reverse May's warning. It pushed the score from 9.1 to 9.2 as election integrity, due process, coercive state power, and military-intelligence neutrality all worsened further, even while courts still blocked several aggressive moves.

Published
June 2026
Current
9.2
Prior
9.1
Status
Red Zone
PDF opens in your browser or downloads depending on device settings.
Democracy Redline meter showing June 2026 score of 9.2 out of 10
The score moved from 9.1 to 9.2. The movement is numerically modest, but significant because several high-weight categories are already operating at extreme-risk levels.

The formal June record

June's strongest negative driver was election structure. The Supreme Court allowed Alabama to use a map lower courts had found diluted Black voting power, reinforcing the post-Callais collapse of federal protections against racially dilutive redistricting. At the same time, the administration's March 31 election order remained under severe legal scrutiny for trying to federalize citizenship verification and mail-voting controls.

Due process also worsened. The mass no-bond detention fight continued across the federal courts while the June 3 workforce order removed procedural protections from thousands of senior policy-related federal employees. Intelligence and military neutrality deteriorated further as leadership churn, loyalty concerns, and weakened job protections hit the national-security state during ongoing Iran-related conflict.

Overall movement9.1 → 9.2

Month-over-month acceleration

Biggest category moveElection +0.2

Structural election pressure worsened

Countervailing brakesCourts

Meaningful restraint, not reversal

June’s movement came from convergence, not one dramatic headline.

The published score moved from 9.1 to 9.2 because multiple high-risk categories deteriorated together. The warning is not that one event alone crossed a line. The warning is that election structure, due process, coercive state power, and military/intelligence neutrality all moved in the wrong direction while the system was already in the Red Zone.

This recurring monthly explainer is meant to make each score movement readable: what moved, what restrained the score, and what the public should watch next.

What changed in June 2026 visual explainer showing movement from 9.1 to 9.2, main drivers, countervailing brakes, and civic meaning
Click to enlarge. This visual can be reused in newsletters, briefings, and responsible public shares.
Movement9.1 to 9.2. A small number, but meaningful at an already extreme level.
DriversFour categories moved or remained under severe pressure at the same time.
BrakesCourts and public documentation still slowed some damage, but did not reverse the direction.

Weighted 9-category rubric

CategoryWeightMayJuneMoveJune reading
Election Integrity & Peaceful Transfer20%9.09.2+0.2Alabama map order and unresolved federal election-order litigation reinforced structural risk.
Rule of Law & Court Compliance18%9.59.50.0Extreme-risk level held while courts continued restraining executive actions.
Habeas Corpus & Due Process14%9.49.5+0.1Detention and workforce due-process erosion kept the category in acute crisis.
Political Targeting / Weaponization of Justice12%9.59.50.0The failed fund did not normalize the larger selective-protection risk.
Institutional Checks & Anti-Corruption10%9.39.2-0.1Judicial brakes and preserved enforcement powers produced modest relief.
Press Freedom & Information Control8%9.19.10.0Pressure remained severe, but June did not clearly justify another upward move.
Coercive State Power & Policing Norms8%9.09.1+0.1Centralized personnel control and enforcement pressure nudged the category higher.
Civil Society & Associational Freedom6%8.58.4-0.1Protective rulings created modest relief without restoring safety.
Military / Intelligence Neutrality4%8.89.0+0.2Loyalty pressure and weakened protections elevated independence risk.

Published trajectory

Published Democracy Redline score trajectory through June 2026

The chart is used as a continuity record. It helps readers understand sequence, persistence, and acceleration rather than treating any month as an isolated headline.

The five developments that most affected June

1

Election Integrity worsened again

The Alabama map order converted the post-Callais rollback into another concrete June deterioration with immediate 2026 election consequences.

9.0 → 9.2
2

Habeas and due process stayed in acute crisis

The no-bond detention fight kept splitting the circuits while the June 3 workforce order removed long-standing procedural protections from thousands of senior federal employees.

9.4 → 9.5
3

Military and intelligence neutrality deteriorated further

DNI turnover, loyalty concerns, and weaker protections for senior national-security personnel made professional independence look more vulnerable in June.

8.8 → 9.0
4

Weaponized justice stayed at the ceiling tier

The Anti-Weaponization Fund collapsed under judicial and bipartisan pressure, but the larger accountability asymmetry around insider protection and selective scrutiny remained intact.

Held 9.5
5

Courts still blocked several aggressive moves

June's strongest counterweights were the injunction against ideological grant conditions and the collapse of the Anti-Weaponization Fund.

Partial restraint

Real brakes, not reversal

June still produced meaningful democratic friction. Courts blocked ideological conditions on federal funding streams. The Anti-Weaponization Fund was stopped before the administration could disburse money through a highly questionable patronage mechanism. These developments matter because they show the judiciary can still impose limits. But they also illustrate the broader problem: the warning system is increasingly measuring how much damage accumulates before the brakes engage.

How to read this report

Not a forecast.
The score does not claim to predict the future. It tracks direction, intensity, accumulation, and proximity to redline conditions.
Evidence first.
Each meaningful entry separates fact, interpretation, and score impact.
Continuity matters.
The archive preserves the month-by-month record so readers can compare progression over time.