Alarm
bells sound over Trump’s ‘take over the voting’ call
Democracy
experts say there is little doubt about president’s desire to interfere in
elections this November
Sam
Levine
Sam
Levine in New York
Sat 7 Feb
2026 06.00 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/07/trump-interference-voting-midterms
Donald
Trump set off alarm bells earlier this week with comments that his
administration should “take over the voting” in some states in the run-up to
the 2026 midterms, which followed an unprecedented FBI raid on an election
office in Georgia. Although election experts say it’s clear the president
doesn’t have authority over elections, they warn the president’s corrosive
rhetoric leaves little doubt about his intent.
For
months, the Trump administration has stoked doubts about the integrity of
American elections largely through lawsuits designed to create the impression
states aren’t doing enough to keep ineligible voters off the rolls. That effort
escalated significantly last week when the FBI raided the election office in
Fulton county, Georgia and seized ballots, along with other materials, related
to the 2020 election. Shortly after the raid, Trump escalated his attack even
further, saying the federal government should take over elections.
“The
Republicans should say, ‘We want to take over,’” he said during a recent
interview with Dan Bongino, the former deputy FBI director who has returned to
hosting a podcast. “We should take over the voting, the voting in at least many
– 15 places. The Republicans ought to nationalize the voting.”
Democracy
experts believe there is no longer any doubt about Trump’s desire to interfere
with this fall’s elections.
“We
should not be waiting for the next shoe to drop,” said Wendy Weiser,
vice-president for democracy at the Brennan Center for Justice. “There is a
full-blown effort to seize control of some of the mechanisms of our elections
and to lay the foundation for interfering in upcoming elections.”
The
president has no power over federal elections, and the US constitution is not
ambiguous on the matter. Article I, section 4 of the document gives states the
power to run elections. Congress, the constitution says, can pass nationwide
rules for federal elections.
Nonetheless,
Trump and his allies have suggested the president may still be able to wield
some kind of emergency power to take control of the electoral process.
“The
president’s authority is limited in his role with regard to elections except
where there is a threat to the national sovereignty of the United States – as I
think that we can establish with the porous system that we have,” Cleta
Mitchell, a conservative lawyer and Trump ally said on a podcast interview last
year. “Then, I think maybe the president is thinking he will exercise some
emergency powers to protect the federal elections going forward.”
Declaring
a national emergency unlocks about 150 statutory powers for the president,
including things like shutting down radio stations, suspending certain military
regulations, and to sanction foreign countries.
But none
of those powers “even come close to giving the president any authority over
elections”, Weiser said. “The president has zero emergency powers over
elections.”
The
concern about the president using emergency powers has only been amplified by
the presence of Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, at the
Fulton county raid. Gabbard, whose presence as an intelligence official on a
domestic matter has caused widespread outrage, is said to be investigating
voting equipment and foreign interference.
Among
others, Gabbard is briefing Mitchell and Kurt Olsen, another lawyer who was
involved in Trump’s effort to overturn the election, on her investigation, the
Wall Street Journal reported.
Mitchell
declined to comment on those briefings, but said she understood Trump’s
comments to be more about the need to change federal voting laws.
“All of
the election statutes need significant revision, updating, and reform. And many
of us are working on that,” Mitchell said in an email. “Clearly there are far
too many election officials nationwide who treat the law as optional
suggestions. And have instituted procedures that are contrary to law. That
happened in spades in 2020 and is all too common every election. Sloppy, poor
administration and intentional disregard of basic statutory requirements. We
see it everywhere.”
There is
no evidence of widespread fraud in 2020 or in any other election.
The White
House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, has framed Trump’s comments similarly.
Trump subsequently undercut those efforts to downplay his comments, criticizing
Democratic cities such as Philadelphia, Detroit and Atlanta, saying: “If they
can’t count the votes legally and honestly, then somebody else should take
over.”
Beyond
unspecified actions to take control of state election processes, there are
other pathways for Trump to try to interfere in the election process.
Steve
Bannon, the influential conservative personality and former Trump strategist,
has called for Trump to deploy ICE agents at the polls. Such an effort would
violate a federal law that prohibits federal troops from being at the polls
“unless such force be necessary to repel armed enemies of the United States”.
“We’re
going to have ICE surround the polls come November. We’re not going to sit here
and allow you to steal the country again,” Bannon said on his podcast on
Tuesday. “And you can whine and cry and throw your toys out of the pram all you
want, but we will never again allow an election to be stolen.”
The Trump
administration has already shown its willingness to use emergency powers to try
to expand the president’s authority. Last spring, the Trump administration
invoked the Alien Enemies Act, an 18th-century law that allows the government
to deport immigrants without full due process. The United States, the
government argued, was subject to an invasion by the Venezuelan gang Tren de
Aragua. Federal judges have since blocked that order and expressed skepticism
it is a legitimate invasion. Trump has also claimed he has emergency powers to
impose tariffs, though the supreme court appears poised to reject that
argument.
Part of
the reason Trump is talking about nationalizing elections now may be to try to
get the public to accept an idea that is obviously illegal.
“He is
trying to socialize an idea that has nothing to do with what our actual system
is and that is actually against the law, to change public expectations about
what’s actually valid and allowed,” she said. “That’s why the public needs to
know about this. Because they need to know in advance that if that happens,
that’s a trick, that’s a plot, that’s actually deception to get you to accept
the unacceptable.”

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