Dominion Voting Systems has officially ended its high-profile 2020 election lawsuit against Mike Lindell after more than three years of aggressive litigation and public spectacle.

The quiet legal filing marks a remarkable reversal for a company that had once demanded $1.3 billion from the outspoken MyPillow CEO.

Court documents show that both sides reached a confidential settlement, resulting in the full dismissal of Dominion’s claims with prejudice.

That means the company cannot refile the same lawsuit again.

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Each side will cover its own legal fees and costs, meaning neither prevailed financially over the other.

A spokesperson for Liberty Vote, the new company that acquired Dominion in October, confirmed the deal with a short statement.

“The Parties have agreed to a confidential settlement to this matter,” the spokesperson said Tuesday, declining to comment further.

The lack of details has only fueled speculation about what exactly took place behind closed doors.

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Dominion originally launched the defamation lawsuit in February 2021.

It accused Lindell of spreading what the company called “falsehoods” about election tampering in the 2020 presidential race.

Dominion’s complaint demanded astronomical damages, claiming Lindell’s public comments and passionate defense of election integrity had cost the company business and tarnished its reputation.

Lindell, a long time Trump ally, maintained throughout the ordeal that his criticisms of Dominion were protected speech rooted in his personal investigation and belief that problems existed in the 2020 elections.

He also used the lawsuit as proof of what he called political persecution by powerful entities determined to silence dissent.

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The Dominion complaint mocked Lindell’s motivations, describing him as “a talented salesman and former professional card counter” who “sells the lie because the lie sells pillows.”

That language captured the contempt that many corporate and media figures felt toward Lindell, who rose from a Minnesota entrepreneur to a symbol of grassroots skepticism about America’s election system.

The company’s change in ownership last October brought a major turning point.

Former GOP election official Scott Leiendecker purchased Dominion and rebranded it as Liberty Vote, promising to rebuild trust in the nation’s voting process.

“Liberty Vote signals a new chapter for American elections, one where trust is rebuilt from the ground up,” Leiendecker said at the time.

The rebranded firm pledged a top down review of Dominion’s machines ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

That included evaluating which machines to rebuild and which to retire entirely.

The decision to settle Lindell’s case may be part of that broader effort to distance Liberty Vote from years of partisan battles that surrounded the Dominion name.

For many conservatives, the abrupt dismissal shines a bright light on how fragile the case really was.

Dominion, now Liberty Vote, clearly had the opportunity to take its claims to a full trial but opted instead for a confidential end.

Such a quiet retreat does not fit the narrative of a company confident about its evidence or its accusations.

Lindell himself has suffered significant personal and financial cost fighting both this and other legal battles tied to his election remarks.

Yet the dismissal offers a measure of vindication after years of being mocked and threatened by the left’s media allies.

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Countless outlets labeled him a conspiracy theorist and predicted his total ruin.

Those same outlets had loudly promoted Dominion’s allegations and celebrated every procedural ruling along the way.

The legal community will be watching closely to see if this signals the beginning of a different approach to politically charged defamation suits.

When massive corporations leverage billion dollar claims against private citizens, it sends a chilling message about free speech and public debate.

The First Amendment is supposed to protect robust political expression, even when it offends powerful figures or unpopular narratives.

While the monetary details remain hidden, the message is unmistakable.

Dominion, under new management, decided that continuing to pursue Lindell was not worth the cost, the public scrutiny, or the risk of losing.

After years of chest pounding statements about truth and accountability, it quietly walked away.

As Liberty Vote attempts to start fresh, the rest of the country still remembers how Dominion operated during this era of massive political division.

Whether this rebranding can wipe away the stain of its aggressive lawsuits remains unclear.

One thing seems certain, though. Mike Lindell, who refused to bow to corporate intimidation, has outlasted yet another attempt to silence him.

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