
WASHINGTON — Election officials from across the country pushed back on Thursday against the Trump administration’s increasingly combative tactics, following an FBI raid in Fulton County, Georgia, and a growing number of Justice Department demands for voter rolls. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. When election officials convene in Washington, D.C.
Main Idea: Election officials pushed back against the Trump administration after an FBI raid in Fulton County and Justice Department demands for voter rolls raised fresh worries about federal pressure on elections.
Key Points:
FBI raids and Justice Department voter-roll demands can raise fear about election fairness and add costs and confusion for state offices, which may weaken voter trust.
State pushback may limit overreach and protect election rules, helping preserve clear local control and confidence in future voting.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
The county whose elections hub was searched and whose records were seized, making it a core setting and.
Central federal agency demanding voter rolls and driving the article’s election-administration conflict.
Conducted the Fulton County search and seizure that triggered the article’s main backlash.
Central political actor tied to the administration’s tactics, FBI raid context, and voter-roll demands discussed throughout the article.
Prominent state election official quoted directly criticizing the Fulton County raid and defending election integrity.
Senior Justice Department official whose comments on voter rolls drew direct criticism from state officials.
Named Justice Department leader whose stated linkage of voter-roll demands to immigration enforcement is a key part of.
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Sign in to commentState election chief quoted on constitutional objections to federal election overreach.
Prominent state election official quoted directly pushing back on Trump-era election claims and federal pressure.
State election official quoted describing the administration’s actions as intimidation.
Republican election official whose criticism of the administration’s voter-roll push is a substantive part of the article.
State election official quoted about cybersecurity and federal support; meaningful but secondary.