Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    • Advertisement
    Tuesday, July 14
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    ABS Africa TV
    • Breaking News
    • Trending
    • Africa News
    • World News
    • Features
    • Technology
    • More
      • Sports
      • Politics
      • Culture
      • Lifestyle
      • Travel
      • Business
      • Environment
      • Legal
      • Health
      • Cameroon
      • Ambazonia
      • AfroSingles
      • Environ/Climate
      • Editorial
      • The Leak Magazine
    • Donate
    Subscription
    ABS Africa TV
    Home»Politics»Trump’s fixation on voting has had mixed results. He still has ways to affect November’s elections
    Politics

    Trump’s fixation on voting has had mixed results. He still has ways to affect November’s elections

    Chukwu GodloveBy Chukwu GodloveJune 30, 2026No Comments10 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Trump's fixation on voting has had mixed results. He still has ways to affect November's elections
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Post Views: 27

    Trump’s fixation on voting has had mixed results. He still has ways to affect November’s elections – The Economic Times

    Your Privacy is Important to us

    We encourage you to review our Terms of Service, and Privacy Policy.By continuing, you agree to the Terms listed here. In case you want to opt out, please click “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” link in the footer of this page

    Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information

    We won’t sell or share your personal information to inform the ads you see. You may still see interest-based ads if your information is sold or shared by other companies or was sold or shared previously

    Read on App

    Trump’s fixation on voting has had mixed results. He still has ways to affect November’s elections


    AP
    President Donald Trump addresses the crowd at the Washington Hilton, in Washington

    Trump’s attempts to reshape U.S. election rules have largely failed, with recent Supreme Court and lower court rulings blocking his executive orders and efforts to restrict mail-in voting. Despite these setbacks, Republicans have redrawn congressional districts, and the Justice Department is investigating election operations. Trump’s persistent claims of a rigged 2020 election continue to drive his actions, though legal and constitutional limits remain

    By AP
    Jun 30, 2026, 10:07:00 AM IST
    Follow us
    ATLANTA: US President Donald Trump has tried many ways to tighten his grip on U.S. elections, from signing executive orders to pushing restrictive legislation in Congress. Monday’s Supreme Court ruling siding with states that accept late-arriving mail ballots was the latest example showing the limits of his reach.It followed back-to-back rulings last week that barred his two sweeping executive orders seeking to change national election rules, more court rulings preventing his Department of Justice from obtaining detailed state voter data and his stalled attempts to get the Senate to pass the SAVE Act. That measure would eliminate nearly all absentee voting, require citizenship documents to register to vote and impose photo identification requirements nationwide right before the midterm elections.Also read: Trump urges gasoline retailers to lower prices, warns of ‘big problems’ if they don’t“It’s been a mixed bag for Republicans,” said University of Notre Dame law professor Derek Muller. But the president, he added, “has come up mostly empty-handed.”Trump’s efforts have not been entirely fruitless. Republican-run states have satisfied his demands to redraw congressional district lines, efforts buoyed by the Supreme Court striking down a key section of the Voting Rights Act, and he has been directing his Department of Justice to investigate voting and election operations, which Democrats see as a possible prelude to their involvement in November.All the activity around how the nation votes and runs its elections is a reflection of the Republican president’s long fixation on his false claim that his 2020 election defeat was rigged. He has been so frustrated by the inability of the Senate to pass the SAVE Act that he has refused to sign a bipartisan housing bill.He weighed in again Monday after the Supreme Court’s decision in the mail ballot deadline case, saying on his social media account that he is trying to “save America from crooked elections.” Voting rights groups and Democrats see him abusing power and attempting to suppress legal voters to gain an advantage in the midterms, when control of Congress is at stake.Regardless, Muller said Trump faces legal and political realities: The Constitution gives the states and Congress authority over elections while providing no such role for the president.”That’s how federalism works,” Muller said.Here’s a look at Trump’s efforts to reshape election rules and what options he might have left for the November midterms.

    Focus on non-citizens and voter data has met roadblocks

    The president has repeatedly said U.S. elections are riddled with fraud in part because of noncitizen voting. Research shows the problem to be rare, accounting for a minuscule percentage of fraud cases. Convictions are measured in the hundreds over periods in which tens of millions of ballots are cast.Trump’s view resulted in a multiagency push to nationalize voter data and use federal resources to help states remove voters from the rolls. The Department of Justice has sought detailed voter files from multiple states, data that would include dates of birth and partial Social Security numbers. Democratic and some Republican secretaries of state balked, and federal lawsuits followed. The administration has lost every case so far.

    Homeland Security citizenship check rejected in court

    Trump’s Department of Homeland Security, with help from the DOGE effort led by Elon Musk, revamped a government tool called SAVE (Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements). The program has been a key pillar of his efforts to cull potentially ineligible voters from state rolls.Last week, a federal judge blocked its use as a mass citizenship check.The administration, according to its own news releases, had allowed local election administrators to search users by the thousands, using a wider range of metrics rather than DHS-issued identification numbers. At least 67 million registrations, primarily in Republican-controlled states, were analyzed. Tens of thousands were flagged as potential noncitizens or people who have died, but some voters were wrongly identified as ineligible.U.S. District Court Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan ruled that Trump’s changes aggregated Americans’ sensitive personal data in a way that could result in voters being wrongly purged from the rolls.”All in all, the federal government has knowingly trampled on the privacy rights of American citizens in a manner that threatens the sacred right to vote,” Sooknanan said in her order.

    Executive orders used in place of legislation

    As presidents before him, Trump signed executive orders when Congress would not enact his policy preferences.Trump’s first order reflected his emphasis on noncitizens. Like the SAVE Act pending on Capitol Hill, it sought to require would-be voters to document their citizenship to be able to register to vote.U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper put a temporary block on the order last year as she considered the case and last week made her decision permanent. The Constitution, Casper wrote, “does not grant the President any specific powers over elections.”Trump issued a second order in March, as the SAVE Act’s rough path in Congress became obvious. He called for a national voter list using data from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and the Social Security Administration. Further, the order would have empowered the U.S. Postal Service to determine who gets an absentee ballot and threatened local elections officials with prosecution.Absentee voting is a staple of U.S. elections, but Trump describes the practice, incorrectly, as allowing fraud – even as he has used it himself. A 2025 report by the Brookings Institution found that mail voting fraud occurred in only 0.000043% of total mail ballots cast.Democratic secretaries of state sued, and U.S. District Court Judge Indira Talwani made the same legal assessment as Casper. The provisions, she wrote last week, “unconstitutionally violate the separation of powers.”The White House has indicated it will appeal.

    Even Trump says the SAVE Act has long odds

    Trump on Monday called the Senate logjam “crazy” and one of the holdouts, Republican Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, “Trump-deranged.”It’s the latest legislative tussle that prompted Trump to demand Republicans scrap the filibuster, which requires most major legislation to get support from 60 of the 100 senators. But that likely wouldn’t matter in this case, with four of the Senate’s 53 Republicans declaring their opposition to the bill itself: Murkowski, Susan Collins of Maine, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Thom Tillis of North Carolina.The president acknowledged Monday that the SAVE Act is “probably not going to happen.”

    Trump still has options for the November elections

    Both major parties have national operations to monitor elections, including legal teams ready to file challenges.Despite the Republican National Committee losing the mail ballot case, Chairman Joe Gruters on Monday alluded to those efforts: “We are not going to be deterred by this decision, and the RNC will keep fighting to have elections end on Election Day,” he said.Meanwhile, Trump has been developing a possible roadmap for more aggressive actions.His U.S. attorney in Los Angeles said in June that he had opened multiple election fraud investigations, and he sent a prosecutor to the county’s vote-tabulation center after California’s June primary. Six months earlier, FBI agents executed a warrant and seized ballots and other records from the 2020 election in Georgia’s Fulton County, which includes Atlanta.Muller, the law professor, said local elections officials “already are having conversations about chain of custody disputes” for ballots as they are cast, collected, counted and stored.He and UCLA law professor Rick Hasen noted that judicial warrants are required for the kinds of actions that happened in Fulton County. Muller predicted “the bar would be even higher” for any warrant the administration requests during a live election.Hasen added that he’s working to educate judges around the country on the importance of chain of custody for ballots.”Republicans believe him when he says the election is rigged. And then when Republicans try to change voting rules to tighten things up, that causes Democrats to also think that the election system is being rigged,” Hasen said. “So, if what he’s trying to achieve is undermine voters’ confidence in the election process, he seems to have succeeded spectacularly.”
    (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)

    READ MORE ON

    Donald TrumpDonald Trump US electionsUS electionsSAVE Actbipartisan housing billwhite housesocial securityhomeland securitydepartment of justice

    (Catch all the US News, UK News, Canada News, International Breaking News Events, and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.)

    Download The Economic Times News App to get Daily International News Updates

    NEXT READ

    • Trump’s fixation on voting has had mixed results. He still has ways to affect November’s elections
    • Trump urges gasoline retailers to lower prices, warns of ‘big problems’ if they don’t
    • Trump to make first flight on Qatar-gifted jet this week
    • Warren Buffett skips donation to Gates Foundation amid Epstein review: Report
    • Top US court upholds $5mn Trump sex assault judgment
    • Trump says Iran has requested a meeting, but Iranian officials say nothing has been scheduled
    • Happy birthday, America? At 250, nation may be too divided to celebrate as one
    • Europe is battling a record-breaking heatwave. What’s making it so severe?
    • America at 250: Why Trump’s second term is reviving fears of an ‘imperial presidency’
    • As Supreme Court’s term nears its end, three major Trump rulings due

    The actual difference between earning a high income and achieving financial freedom


    NEXT STORY
    X

    Popular News

    • Psychology says people who wake up before sunrise are not trying to bring structure to their day, they may be trying to listen to their body
    • Ketan Agarwal murder: Police claim Siya Goyal’s family ignored relationship with Chetan, fixed marriage due to wealth gap
    • Psychology says people who don’t clean their homes regularly and let empty bottles, unclean utensils or clothes pile up aren’t lazy: What research says about this behavior
    • Chinese mist cooling systems go viral as heatwave drives demand for outdoor cooling
    • Psychology says people who keep going back to the beach aren’t just relaxing, they may be restoring something deeper

    fixation mixed results Trumps Voting
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Chukwu Godlove

    Related Posts

    Appeal court nullify ADC congress: ADC counter Nafiu Bala presidential candidate upload for Inec portal

    July 13, 2026

    OPINION: Football, Politics and the Real Architects of Goonism

    July 13, 2026

    Are African migrants safe in South Africa?

    July 10, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Search
    Latest Post

    Kenya Luxury Safari Tourism Rises as JW Marriott Opens Mount Kenya Rhino Reserve Safari Camp in Solio Game Reserve with Wellness and Conservation Experiences

    July 13, 2026

    Focus turns to building stronger institutions in Africa to speed shift to renewable energy

    July 13, 2026

    African Economic Conference Calls for Stronger Trade and Unity

    July 13, 2026

    What the end of PEPFAR funding could mean for South Africa’s HIV response | Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

    July 13, 2026

    Google comes out against site blocking in the EU

    July 13, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    ABS TV and ABS Network News is a leading Pan-African 24/7 broadcasting network delivering nonstop news, talk shows, lifestyle programs, and digital media content worldwide through Satellite, Streaming Platforms, and Roku TV.
     
    Based in the United States, we connect Africa to the world while empowering creators, journalists, and brands through innovative media and broadcasting services.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp Instagram

    Our Picks

    Travel

    Kenya Luxury Safari Tourism Rises as JW Marriott Opens Mount Kenya Rhino Reserve Safari Camp in Solio Game Reserve with Wellness and Conservation Experiences

    Environment

    Focus turns to building stronger institutions in Africa to speed shift to renewable energy

    Business

    African Economic Conference Calls for Stronger Trade and Unity

    Most Popular

    Health

    What the end of PEPFAR funding could mean for South Africa’s HIV response | Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

    Legal

    Google comes out against site blocking in the EU

    Lifestyle

    Introducing Nollywood actress Bisola Omobolanle who’s chasing her dream against all odds

    © 2026 Copyright. All Rights Reserved by ABSAFRICATV
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Services

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.