Newsletter
David
French
Opinion
A Law
That Might Just Save the Midterms
Feb. 5,
2026
David
French
By David
French
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/05/opinion/trump-nationalize-elections-midterms.html
Opinion
Columnist
On Sunday
I wrote a column with a singular purpose: I wanted to shake readers out of any
complacency they might be feeling about the integrity of the November midterm
election. We cannot be sure that it will be free or fair.
President
Trump has made it clear — very clear — that he is set to accept only one
outcome: MAGA wins. Any other outcome is proof that the Democrats cheated.
And then
two developments this week demonstrated that, if anything, I wasn’t quite
alarmed enough. First, Trump appeared on Dan Bongino’s podcast (Bongino is the
former deputy director of the F.B.I., now back in his more natural habitat) and
said that undocumented immigrants “were brought to our country to vote, and
they vote illegally.”
As a
result, Trump argued, Republicans “should take over the voting in at least 15
places. The Republicans ought to nationalize the voting.”
Trump’s
language here is reminiscent of the so-called great replacement theory — the
idea, in one telling, that Democrats are trying to essentially replace white
voters with Black and Hispanic immigrants.
Trump
allies immediately picked up the call for federal intervention. “We’re going to
have ICE surround the polls come November,” Steve Bannon said on his “War Room”
podcast. “We’re not going to sit here and allow you to steal the country
again.”
Senator
Tommy Tuberville of Alabama told Larry Kudlow of Fox Business: “Get rid of
these voting machines. There’s a half dozen people here, whether it’s in the
House or Senate, Larry, that are up here as we speak that did not get elected.
It was all bogus. Because we’ve seen the evidence.”
The
second development isn’t directly related to voting, but the implications for
our electoral system are hard not to fathom. On Tuesday, The Washington Post
reported on an extraordinary abuse of power.
Late last
year, a Pennsylvania resident identified only as Jon in the article wrote an
email to a federal prosecutor named Joseph Dernbach, urging leniency for an
immigrant who was facing deportation back to Afghanistan, where he risked being
murdered at the hands of the Taliban.
Here is
the entire text of the letter: “Mr. Dernbach, don’t play Russian roulette with
H’s life. Err on the side of caution. There’s a reason the U.S. government
along with many other governments don’t recognize the Taliban. Apply principles
of common sense and decency.”
Within
hours, Jon received notice that the Department of Homeland Security had issued
a subpoena to Google to compel the company to release information about Jon’s
Google account. And then, days later, a police officer and two Homeland
Security investigators showed up at his house to question him about the email.
They left
after 20 minutes and made it clear that he had nothing to worry about, but
immense damage was done. If even a mild and moderate objection to the
administration’s actions can trigger a subpoena and a visit from law
enforcement, the chilling effect on dissent is obvious. The Trump
administration is creating a pervasive atmosphere of fear and intimidation.
At this
point it’s clear that this administration will abuse its authority and violate
the law to retain power. We knew that after Jan. 6. We know that now.
So what
can we do about it?
If you
ever write a book about a cultural or political crisis, you’ll run into
something that editors sometimes call the “Chapter 10 problem.” It’s the moment
when you transition from vividly describing the crisis to attempting to provide
a solution and none of the solutions seem all that realistic or remotely
satisfactory.
Everything
that would actually fix the problem feels impossible. Everything that’s
possible feels inadequate.
And so it
is here. The Republican Party controls the elected branches of the federal
government, so legislative reform feels impossible. And the reforms that might
be possible seem inadequate. Would a Republican Congress really enact any
measures that would hinder its own quest to retain power?
But it’s
too early to despair. There might be a small window of opportunity to build a
meaningful barrier to MAGA’s quest for permanent power.
On
Tuesday, Trump signed a bill to fund major government agencies for the rest of
the fiscal year, but it contained an important caveat. The Department of
Homeland Security is funded only until the end of next week.
That
means that Republicans and Democrats have only a few days to come to an
agreement on regulating ICE and the Border Patrol before the department loses
its funding. (ICE, however, would not be affected — it received $75 billion in
supplemental funding as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill.)
I have a
proposal.
But to
understand it, we have to zoom out just a bit and look at how Trump is
corrupting our elections. At its core, his entire strategy depends on a
combination of misinformation and impunity.
His
persistent and grotesque lies create a sense of emergency in the Republican
rank and file. They’re convinced that illegal immigrants are voting en masse,
that mail-in ballots are vulnerable to large-scale fraud and that deep-blue
precincts are deliberately corrupting the count.
And then,
once his supporters are sufficiently alarmed, his efforts to overturn the
election aren’t viewed as blatant violations of the law, but as necessary
emergency measures to save the country from the people who are actually trying
to steal the vote — the Democratic Party and its antifa allies.
In their
minds, Trump didn’t pardon criminals when he granted clemency to the Jan. 6
rioters; he pardoned patriots. And Trump’s cronies who created fraudulent
slates of electors after the 2020 election in the hopes that Vice President
Mike Pence would certify the election for Trump weren’t acting lawlessly but
fighting the Democrats’ fraudulent abuse of power.
If
Trump’s attack on our elections is rooted in misinformation and impunity, then
the answer has to be rooted in truth and accountability. It’s imperative that
we confront Trump’s lies wherever we find them while also working for
consequential legal change.
There is
a fascinating quirk in American constitutional law. The president’s awesome
pardon power is limited to federal criminal offenses. He cannot issue a pardon
in a civil case. In other words, he can release people from federal prison. He
can’t keep them out of bankruptcy court.
Here’s
where Congress can act. As I’ve explained before, a complex series of
judicially created immunities mean that it is virtually impossible to win money
damages if a federal officer violates your constitutional rights.
A federal
statute, 42 U.S.C. Section 1983, gives you the right to sue for damages when
state or local government officials deprive you of “any rights, privileges, or
immunities secured by the Constitution and laws” — and those rights,
privileges, and immunities include voting rights.
But the
statute does not apply to federal officials. They enjoy extraordinary immunity
from liability.
This must
change, and it can change. In November, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and
Representatives Hank Johnson and Jamie Raskin reintroduced a bill called the
Bivens Act. It’s remarkably simple. It would amend Section 1983 by stating that
officials “of the United States” can be held liable on the same basis as
officials of any state.
That’s
it. That’s the bill. And it’s worth shutting down the Department of Homeland
Security to get it passed.
If the
bill passes and Trump signs it, he would be able to pardon his cronies if they
commit federal crimes, but not relieve them from potentially immense civil
liability. Money judgments don’t present the same deterrent as prison time, but
they’re consequential nonetheless.
In my law
practice, I saw fear of liability deter many constitutional violations. College
presidents have removed speech codes. Police departments have changed policies.
And not because of criminal prosecution, but from fear of substantial monetary
judgments or injunctions from the courts.
In
addition, the bill would have radiating positive effects across the government.
No longer would officials from any branch of the federal government be able to
violate constitutional rights secure in the knowledge that they would almost
certainly pay no price. They would live with the same legal standards and the
same legal risks that apply to every state and local official in the United
States.
I’m not
naïve. I’m aware that it will be difficult to get Republicans to agree to
greater legal accountability when they control the executive branch, when
Republicans would be most likely to be held accountable, at least in the short
term. And they would have to do so in force here to get past a potential
presidential veto.
But the
Bivens Act would also hold Democrats accountable when they’re back in power. It
would give Republicans tools to restrain Democratic excess. The Bivens Act
protects the Constitution. It does not punish any particular political party.
The
Bivens Act is the best response to administration lawlessness, but it is not
the only response. On Tuesday I emailed with Ian Bassin at Protect Democracy, a
nonpartisan organization that, well, helps protect democracy. He shared a
different proposal for state legislation designed to hold federal officials
accountable for violating constitutional rights.
It’s
called the Universal Constitutional Remedies Act, and it’s a state law that
would grant citizens the right to sue federal, state or local officials in
state court for violations of the federal Constitution.
As Bassin
explained via email, the constitutional theory behind the law is that “federal
law only supersedes state law when federal authority is exercised ‘in pursuance’ of the Constitution. And
unconstitutional acts are the definition of acts not taken ‘in pursuance’ of the Constitution.”
There is
no question that the Trump administration would challenge the law in court, and
I can’t predict the ultimate outcome, but it’s hard for me to see a compelling
reason states shouldn’t seek to hold every public official — including federal
officials — accountable for constitutional violations inside their borders.
And lest
you think the fix would be in when federal officers tried to defend themselves
in state courts, federal law would give them the right to have the case heard
in federal court. They would stand before the same judges that would hear cases
under the Bivens Act.
Neither
the Bivens Act nor the Universal Constitutional Remedies Act is a magic bullet
that will save American democracy, but they would provide greater levels of
deterrence and accountability than I’ve seen so far.
And both
proposed statutes do have one distinct advantage over criminal law. Prosecuting
criminals almost always requires a government official to choose to prosecute.
Justice rests on their discretion.
A civil
case, by contrast, can be brought by any private citizen who believes in good
faith that the government has violated his rights. Citizens don’t have to wait
for the government to hold itself to account; they can choose to do it
themselves.
My focus
on the Bivens Act and the Universal Constitutional Remedies Act doesn’t mean
that other proposals should be dismissed. Every incremental advance in the law
helps preserve democracy, even if it’s as small as requiring ICE officers to
take off their masks. It’s something, and something is better than nothing.
This
dreadful moment has exposed the gaping holes in our systems of constitutional
compliance and accountability. Our system was built far more than we realized
on a foundation of misplaced faith in the enduring integrity of the federal
government. We have to treat the federal government with the same degree of
skepticism and accountability that we’ve reserved for our state and local
governments.
We live
in an age of greed and grifting, where public officials will routinely defy the
Constitution to cling to power and impose their control. It’s necessary to
adjust their incentives.
Yes, a
corrupt president may pardon the crooks and cronies who act on his behalf, but
a modest change in the law could give them pause. Violating civil rights should
carry a profound cost, and the message to the Trump administration should be
simple and clear: Protect the integrity of the election, or we will make you
pay.


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