DOJ Moved to Dismiss the Pollution Suit Against xAI. Musk Was Trump's Biggest Donor.

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The Justice Department asked a federal court on June 16 to dismiss a Clean Air Act lawsuit against xAI, the artificial intelligence company owned by Elon Musk. The government’s argument was blunt. The data center matters too much to national security to face the suit.

The move is unusual. The DOJ does not normally step in to defend a private company against an environmental lawsuit, and almost never one owned by the president’s largest political donor.

A gas plant next to homes and schools

The case began in April 2026, when the NAACP and environmental groups sued over xAI’s Colossus data center near Southaven, Mississippi, just south of Memphis. They say the company is running dozens of natural gas turbines without the Clean Air Act permits the law requires.

The turbines sit near homes, schools, and churches in a mostly Black community. The suit argues the plant is releasing pollution that residents never agreed to breathe, as part of a $20 billion AI buildout.

The national security argument

The DOJ told the court that the lawsuit would undermine the White House’s push to expand AI infrastructure and could threaten national security by cutting power to systems the military relies on. The Pentagon uses xAI’s Grok model, and the filing framed the company’s computing power as essential to keeping pace with adversaries.

Earthjustice, which represents the plaintiffs, said the government’s position amounts to arguing that xAI should be allowed to break the law solely because the Trump administration says so.

The donor on the other side

The intervention lands against a documented backdrop. Elon Musk was the single largest donor of the 2024 election, spending more than $250 million to back Trump and Republican candidates, much of it through his America PAC.

After the election, Musk ran the Department of Government Efficiency, the cost-cutting effort that was disbanded in November 2025. His companies, including SpaceX and Tesla, hold billions of dollars in federal contracts.

Now the same administration is asking a court to spare one of his companies from an environmental law that applies to everyone else.

Why a single plant matters nationally

The legal theory is what makes this bigger than one data center. If a court accepts that national security exempts xAI from the Clean Air Act, the same logic could shield any favored company from any regulation the administration dislikes.

For the families near Southaven, the stakes are immediate. They live next to the turbines while the government argues the plant is too important to stop.

What you can do now

  1. Tell your members of Congress to oppose the DOJ’s motion to dismiss. Ask them to demand, in writing, the legal basis for treating a private data center as exempt from the Clean Air Act, and to call for an oversight hearing on national security claims used to benefit donors. Use the letter below.
  2. Support the plaintiffs. The NAACP and Earthjustice are litigating the case on behalf of Southaven residents. They carry the cost of fighting a lawsuit the federal government has now joined against them.
  3. Follow the local reporting. The Mississippi Free Press is covering the Southaven community and the docket. Local pressure is what keeps a regional pollution case from disappearing.

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