By Edward Hasbrouck; reprinted with permission; see Original article with links:https://news.antiwar.com/2026/04/09/draft-registration-becomes-automatic-in-december/
Amid war build-up, Selective Service System sends the White
House its plan to identify and locate potential draftees
On March 30th, the Selective Service System (SSS) sent the White House its proposed regulations for “automatic” [sic] draft registration for review and approval before they are made public. This is the first visible step in the transition from trying to get young men to sign themselves up for a military draft, to trying to sign them up “automatically” by aggregating data requisitioned from other Federal agencies.
This year-long process began with the enactment of the SSS
proposal for “automatic” registration in December 2025. The new scheme is
supposed to go into operation in December 2026.
In addition to the practical problems of determining who is
subject to the draft (which is many cases depends on factors absent from
existing Federal records) and their current postal mailing addresses (ditto),
the switch to a new registration system requires jumping through many
regulatory hoops. The eight months remaining before the new law takes effect
aren’t much time to complete this process.
The law directing the SSS to try to register potential
draftees “automatically” leaves most of the details to the SSS to establish
through regulations. The SSS has completed the first step in this process by
drafting proposed regulations and submitting them to the White House “Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs” (OIRA). OIRA has up to 90 days to review
the proposed rules, approve them, or send them back to the agency for revision,
but most OIRA reviews take significantly less time than this.
Once a proposed rule is approved by OIRA, the Administrative
Procedure Act generally requires publication of the proposed regulations as a
“Notice of Proposed Rulemaking” (NPRM) in the Federal Register, a window
usually of at least 30 or 60 days for the public to submit comments on the
proposal, and consideration of those comments by the agency before it publishes
a final rule.
The SSS is a tiny agency being given unprecedented authority
to demand access to data from all other Federal agencies. The attempt to
register potential draftees “automatically” will be a large, complex exercise
in data collection, data sharing, and data matching between the SSS and other
agencies.
Multiple elements of this process will require notice and
comment and/or other approvals pursuant to the Privacy Act, Paperwork Reduction
Act, and Computer Matching Act.
The Privacy Act of 1974 requires each Federal agency to
publish a notice in the Federal Register (with an opportunity for public
comment) including specific information about each of system of records about
U.S. citizens or residents. The notice must include the sources, recipients,
and uses of the data. Maintaining such a system of records without first
publishing a complete notice is a crime on the part of the responsible agency
officials or employees. “Automatic” registration will require new sources of registration
data from other agencies and therefore a revised Privacy Act notice.
Even before the start of “automatic” registration, the SSS
gave DOGE access to the registration database in early 2025, and in late 2025
proposed sharing its registration data with more other agencies for immigration
enforcement and other purposes.
The Paperwork Reduction Act requires an agency to publish
first a 60-day notice and then a 30-day notice in the Federal Register and then
get approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) before collecting
information from members of the public. The OMB approval number must be
included on any form, Web site, or app through which information is collected.
The SSS has been collecting information for decades through
its “Request for Status Information Letter” form, but has never requested or
received approval from OMB for this form. The form does not display an OMB
control number, making it flagrantly illegal.
The Computer Matching and Privacy Protection Act of 1988
requires advance notice in the Federal Register, a Privacy Impact Assessment,
due-process procedures for individuals who are denied benefits on the basis of
data matching, and an annual cost-benefit review and report to Congress for
each data matching program by a Federal agency that is used to determine
eligibility for, or compliance with, any Federal benefit program.
New and expanded computer matching programs will be central
to the attempt to register potential draftees “automatically”. These programs
will be subject to the Computer Matching Act. It remains to be seen whether the
SSS will continue to ignore this law even as it dramatically expands its
computer matching programs.
“Automatic” registration was enacted with no public
awareness, hearings, debate, or budget review. It’s a bad idea, and it won’t
work. The chances for repeal of the MSSA may depend on how soon and how widely
“automatic” draft registration is recognized as not only bound to fail but a
data grab for DOGE and an enabler of more aggressive war planning and policies.
More resources:
https://hasbrouck.org/draft/automatic/
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Draft Registration and Draft Resistance:
Edward Hasbrouck is the editor and publisher of Resisters.info, the most comprehensive non-governmental source of information about the draft, draft registration, and draft resistance in the U.S. since 1980. His articles and op-eds about the draft and draft registration have been published in Waging Nonviolence, Antiwar.com, Peace Chronicle, Responsible Statecraft, Fifth Estate, Peoples World, On Watch, and the San Francisco Chronicle, in addition to his own Web site and blog. He is a member of the War Resisters League and the Military Law Task Force of the National Lawyers Guild, and works as a consultant to a human rights project in San Francisco.
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