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Concerns grow over Trump's 'take over the voting' call
Summary
Democracy experts report President Trump suggested his administration should "take over the voting" in some states, and legal specialists say the Constitution gives states authority to run federal elections.
Content
President Trump said his administration should "take over the voting" in some states ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. The remark came after an FBI raid on the Fulton County election office in Georgia that investigators say recovered materials related to the 2020 election. Democracy experts say the president does not have authority over federal elections under the Constitution. They warn the rhetoric and recent actions increase concern about potential interference with state-run election processes.
Known details:
- The president was reported as saying the federal government should "take over the voting" in multiple places, language that experts describe as an effort to nationalize voting.
- Constitutional law assigns states the primary role in running federal elections (Article I, section 4), and specialists cited in the reporting say the president lacks emergency powers to control elections.
- The FBI conducted a raid on the Fulton County election office; the director of national intelligence was reported as present and said to be investigating voting equipment and possible foreign interference.
Summary:
Democracy experts say the president's comments and related actions have prompted concern that there is an effort to lay groundwork for interfering with upcoming elections. Undetermined at this time.
