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Published on
Saturday, June 20, 2026 at 08:15 PM
States Move to Protect Voting Rights from Federal Reach

Five Democratic-led states have enacted emergency legislation to protect their election systems from federal interference, responding to what lawmakers describe as unprecedented threats to voting rights from the Trump administration. California, Colorado, Connecticut, Maryland and Washington state have all passed new laws aimed at safeguarding November's midterm elections as the administration pursues aggressive efforts to reshape how voting is conducted.

The measures come as President Donald Trump continues to promote baseless claims of widespread voter fraud and attempts to restrict mail-in voting access, despite his efforts to pass new voting restrictions through Congress having stalled. Maryland state Sen. Cynthia Kagan, a Democrat who co-sponsored a new law protecting the state's deadline for counting mail-in ballots received after Election Day, said, "It's infuriating that the Trump administration believes they can ignore the Constitution of the United States and try to take over our elections."

Federal Actions Raising Alarm

Since returning to the White House last year, Trump has signed executive orders aimed at cracking down on mail-in voting, which he has baselessly cast as rife with fraud. His administration has seized records related to the 2020 election he lost from the largest counties in Georgia and Arizona. The Department of Justice is fighting in court to gain access to multiple states' voter rolls as it searches for proof of ineligible individuals, including noncitizens, casting ballots.

Asked last month whether he would send Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers or National Guard troops to the polls, Trump responded he would do "anything necessary to make sure we have honest elections." Other administration officials have declined to rule out the idea publicly.

Protecting Voters and Election Workers

Connecticut's new law, which takes effect in 11 days on July 1, seeks to largely bar law enforcement from being within 250 feet of a polling location, ballot dropbox or vote-counting site without the permission of election officials. State Rep. Matt Blumenthal, a Democrat who chairs his chamber's government administration and election committee and is a lead sponsor of the new law, said, "The reason why we've entertained these steps is because of the shocking and unprecedented statements and actions that Donald Trump and his allies, including in government, have undertaken to threaten and attack our elections."

In California, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom last month signed legislation that prohibits election officials from providing unauthorized access to voter rolls or voting machines without a court order. It also makes it a crime to knowingly take voted ballots from election officials without a valid warrant. During the signing ceremony, Newsom described California's law as needed "to address the legitimate anxiety" about the administration's moves.

Newsom also referred to the high-profile seizure of 650,000 ballots cast in last year's special election from Riverside County, California, by the county's sheriff Chad Bianco, a Republican who was running for governor. A local judge had signed a warrant for what Bianco called a "fact-finding mission" into potential election fraud. Earlier this year, the state Supreme Court halted the probe and ordered the seized ballots preserved.

Safeguarding Mail-In Voting Access

In Maryland, Democratic lawmakers have objected to the president's repeated efforts to curb mail-in voting. The Trump administration is backing a push by the Republican National Committee before the US Supreme Court that seeks to stop the counting of ballots in federal elections that arrive after Election Day. A decision from the high court is expected soon. Maryland is one of 14 states, along with the District of Columbia, which counts mail ballots received after Election Day, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Maryland has a 10-day grace period as long as ballots are postmarked on or before Election Day.

Colorado's law, signed earlier this month by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, prohibits interfering with voting within a newly established 100-foot buffer zone around ballot drop boxes and polling locations. It also gives the governor, with input from an advisory committee, the power to declare an emergency to allow elections to proceed in the event of any disruption.

Washington state's law, enacted 3 months ago in March, makes it a felony, punishable by up to five years in prison, to disclose personal information contained in the voter registration file to people other than state and local election officials without the permission of the secretary of state. The measure's sponsor, Democratic state Sen. Marcus Riccelli, said it doesn't bar a government entity from requesting the information and potentially obtaining it, but the request "has to go through our secretary of state who manages our statewide voter registration database."

Legal and Constitutional Challenges Ahead

Connecticut's new law also requires municipal officials or election workers who receive a subpoena or warrant to notify the attorney general and secretary of state within 36 hours. Blumenthal said the Connecticut law would not necessarily prevent federal agents from obtaining election material in circumstances similar to those in Fulton County, Georgia, but it tries to give state officials the opportunity to intervene in court before ballots or machines are seized under a warrant. He said, "We want to ensure that some judicial authority has heard both sides of the story and also ensure, that if it is executed, it's done in a way that doesn't interfere with our elections."

Blumenthal pointed to the FBI's seizure about 5 months ago on January 28 of 2020 election records in Fulton County, Georgia. An affidavit unsealed after a legal challenge from local officials showed that claims from 2020 election deniers were used to justify the FBI's warrant.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement that Trump "is committed to ensuring that Americans have full confidence in the administration of elections, and that includes totally accurate and up-to-date voter rolls free of errors and unlawfully registered non-citizen voters." She added, "This campaign pledge from the President is why millions of Americans sent him back to the White House."

Some Republican lawmakers argued that Democrats are trying to interfere with legitimate scrutiny of elections by the federal government. California state Sen. Tony Strickland, a Republican who opposes the new law in his state, said he expects a legal challenge to it on grounds that it could violate the Constitution's Supremacy Clause, which prohibits states from regulating the federal government. He said, "I think that we should have the ability at all levels of government to be able to monitor elections to make sure elections are done properly." He added, "What do you have to hide?"

Richard Pildes, the co-director of the Democracy Project at New York University's Law School, said new laws in places such as Washington state that create criminal penalties for local officials who share sensitive data may survive challenges on constitutional grounds because they do not attempt to police federal actions. He said, "They are designed to tell their election officials not to voluntarily give the information over if it's requested." He added, "They're regulating their own election officials. They're not telling federal officials how to conduct their responsibilities."

Justin Levitt, a Loyola Law School professor who served as a White House adviser on voting during the Biden administration, said states have had legal skirmishes with the federal government over election rules in the recent past but most centered on changes enacted by Congress. He said, "What is different now is that the president is trying to act outside federal law and his powers." Levitt said he believes this fall's elections will not face serious disruption. He added, "States themselves are in charge of the process. And when the president orders stuff to get done, the states just don't have to listen."

Why This Matters:

The US Constitution gives states the primary task of running elections, a fundamental principle of American federalism that protects democratic participation from centralized control. These new state laws represent efforts to preserve voter access and election integrity in the face of federal actions that legal experts say may exceed presidential authority. The outcome will determine whether states can maintain policies like counting mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day—a practice used by 14 states plus the District of Columbia that expands access for working families, military members, and voters with disabilities. The legal battles ahead will also test whether federal law enforcement can seize ballots and voting records based on unproven fraud claims, potentially chilling voter participation and undermining public confidence in democratic institutions. For millions of voters who rely on mail-in voting, these state protections could be the difference between having their voices counted or disenfranchised.

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