Reuters uncovered a broader‑than‑previously known Trump administration effort to gain federal control over elections, historically run locally, in at least eight states – using investigations, raids and demands for access to balloting systems and voter ID.
What happened
In January, a DHS agent sought unredacted voter records and voter‑registration information from Franklin County, Ohio, without explaining the basis for the request. Reuters found similar federal requests for voter data, access to voting machines or revived fraud investigations in at least eight states, including Nevada, Colorado, Michigan and Missouri, often tied to claims previously rejected by courts.
Why it matters
Elections are constitutionally administered by states, and officials across party lines say the growing federal push tests that boundary. The Trump administration’s efforts raise concerns about voter‑data privacy, federal overreach, intimidation of election officials and the potential use of disputed fraud claims in close races. Many administrators report increased legal costs, security fears and staff strain.
What’s next
States are bracing for more federal scrutiny ahead of November, drafting response plans for subpoenas and data demands. Ongoing litigation between states and the federal government could shape how far federal election enforcement can go — and redefine the balance of power over U.S. elections.
Read the special report here.