Tag: Richard Hasen

  • The Fulton County Raid: A Blueprint for Election Interference in 2026?

    FBI agents load boxes from an Election Commission building into a van under police watch.

    Blue Press JournalThe 2026 Department of Justice raid on a Fulton County, Georgia election office, seizing ballots and machinery, was a watershed moment. While framed as an investigation into the 2020 election, legal experts and election officials nationwide interpreted it as a dangerous escalation and a potential dress rehearsal for future electoral disruption.

    Election law scholar Richard Hasen of UCLA Law warned in Slate that the action appeared less about the past and more like a “test run for messing with election administrators” in upcoming contests. This aligns with a persistent pattern of baseless election fraud claims being used to justify unprecedented federal overreach into state-run elections.

    The prospect of similar ballot seizures during or after the 2026 midterms raises profound legal and constitutional alarms. As the Brennan Center for Justice’s Wendy Weiser stated, such actions would be “wildly illegal,” requiring judicial warrants or subpoenas that are meant to serve as a check on power. However, the legally questionable Fulton County warrant, now itself being challenged in court for its “Material Omissions and Misstatements,” demonstrates how these safeguards can be exploited.

    In response, Democratic secretaries of state are not standing idle. Officials in states like Colorado and Minnesota have publicly outlined their preparations to immediately challenge any federal interference in the courts. “We’ve been preparing for this event and many other scenarios of federal disruption,” Colorado’s Jena Griswold noted, underscoring the heightened state of alert.

    A potential legal defense may ironically come from a recent Supreme Court decisionBost v. Illinois State Board of Elections. As analyzed by SCOTUSblog, this ruling could provide candidates standing to sue in advance to prevent actions—like seizing ballots—that threaten a “fair process and an accurate result,” offering a new tool to preempt interference before it occurs.

    While the administration seeks to expand its electoral power, a coalition of state officials, legal experts, and judicial checks stands as a barrier to these efforts in 2026.