[MUSIC]
>> Hi, everyone, from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
“This is on with Kara Swisher and I'm Kara Swisher.”
Two years after electing a president, voters usually sour on the party in the White House, and they're in the mood to throw the bombs out. But president Trump sees the loss of the House Senate or both as an existential threat. I'd like to see the Republican Party nationalized elections in 15 states. Trump says he's going to mandate voter ID laws across the country, and if he has his way,
mail-in voting will be illegal. What's more, the FBI rated the Fulton County Election Hub in Georgia and sees ballots from the 2020 election, and his administration is demanding voter roles from across the country.
So in order to try to wrap our heads around Trump's strategy for undermining the upcoming elections,
I'd brought together three experts, a journalist, and an election administrator, and a law professor. Natalie Adona is the registrar of voters from Marin County, California. She is the co-author of Understanding the Voter Experience and Stewards of Democracy. She's a contributing author for the recently published book, "Local Election and Administrators in the United States," and she personally experienced harassment at the hands of Magga
election deniers. Susan B. Glasser is a staff writer at the New Yorker. She writes a weekly column on life in Washington, and is a host of the political scene podcast. Her recent article on this topic, Donald Trump already knows the 2026 election is rigged, is essential reading.
Annette Percelli is a professor at Stanford Law School and the co-director of the Stanford Law AI Initiative. He is an expert on election law and redistricting and the co-author of the leading election law case book, "The Law of Democracy." I know a lot of you are confused, I'm confused, I'm upset, and I don't know what is up and what is down. So this is an important competition for you and for me, stick around. Support for this show comes from Vanta.
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So why not you? Try Odo for free at Odo.com/vox. Natalie Susan and Nate, thanks for coming on on. Last week, President Trump posted on true social, there will be voter ID for the midterm elections whether approved by Congress or not exclamation point.
Voter impersonation is virtually non-existent, but polls show that eight out of 10 American support voter ID requirements and emphasizing that some states don't require ID reinforces
Trump's narrative that the midterms are rigged so are you all more concerned ...
could weaponize this narrative and the lead-up to election day itself or after the vote
during the counting and certification process? Let's hear from you for Susan and Nate and then Natalie. Well, thank you so much, Cara. It's great to be with you.
“I think to me it's not an either-war question, unfortunately, right?”
Already, what's so striking about the 2026 midterms is Donald Trump's pre-emptive efforts to undermine it on such a broad front, right? So you have the category that you're talking about, which is to demand changes essentially in the playing field, in the rules. This has begun, by the way, much earlier, much more persistently, much more specifically
than Trump's previous efforts. We all know he's the only president in American history ever to seek to overturn the
results of an election that he decisively lost, but it's much broader than that this
time. So he's gone after it earlier. I would say the minimum scenario here for his interference in the election is to seek to undermine the confidence in it, right, in the integrity and that sort of thing. But he's also made these very specific threats like the one that you just mentioned.
If only that was even the extent of it, right? The lawyers could just say this is absurd, it's not constitutional, it's not legal. But from my perspective, he's tried to change the rules. He's tried to change the playing field, literally to rewrite the maps across the country in places that are favorable to him.
He's threatened state and local election officials. He's installed election deniers and key positions in the federal government.
“So we could go on, but I think the problem that I'm looking at is that here we are”
only in February and we're already in a scenario where it's not if, but when and how Trump
is going to seek to undermine our confidence in these elections. Right. So he's preparing for it, like at octopus or whatever and because people have a long history of thinking elections are lifted, whether it's fictional or in American history. Nate?
Well in particular in the last decade, right, Donald Trump actually has said each of the elections even the ones that he won was marked by fraud. I mean, we tend to forget that even in 2016, he thought that that was a fraudulent election. And so I'm actually less concerned about this particular declaration because I do think the courts would stop him from doing that.
But there's a lot of things outside of that that are happening, whether it's DOJ requests for data from the states or whether it's possible messing around with the mail system. Let alone threats is to what might happen on election day itself. So these kinds of kind of pho executive orders, the courts are going to be able to handle beforehand, but there's just a lot of uncertainty as to what might be happening in the run-up
to November. And Natalie? Sure. Thanks for having me on. For me, I have a little bit of a different perspective because I do administer elections.
And from my point of view, in California, identification is required when you register, but not when you go to vote in person. We do go through a verification process, particularly with vote by mail. And so for me, and for many of my colleagues, if it's not on the books as law, then it's just sort of messaging.
But that said, the messaging does have an effect on our voters that get confused. Do I need ID? Do I not need ID? And all of the messaging that's out there that's coming from the administration that can get confusing for people, the survey show of time and again that local elections
officials are a trusted voice when it comes to election information. And so our focus is on making sure that people get the non-partisan information that they need because at the end of the day, people just want to vote. As an election official, they feel scared, or do they just confuse, use the word "chunfused" specifically.
Correct? Well, some people do feel very concerned with what they see out there in the news, but I think for the most part, people are just seeking information. And they want to hear directly from the election officials. What do I need?
Am I registered? Where do I go to vote?
“And that's where we come in and tell people, hey, you know, if you want to vote, you”
are welcome to come here, make sure you're registered. You will update your registration if you need to, and you know when election day is. Right. Let's talk about three things. The Trump administration has already done to undermine elections.
One is seize the ballots in Georgia, demand that Republican states gerrymander to create more Republican-leaning house districts, and demand voter data from states, each of these have varying levels of success, but these are three very specific things in each area.
Susan, I want to start with the January FBI raid on the Fulton County electio...
That was based on an affidavit that was full of debunk claims about the 2020 elections. Nonetheless, the judge still signed it, and it's leading to renewed calls in Georgia for the state to take over elections in Fulton County. Walk us through the raids implications as we look towards the mid-terms.
“Yeah, Kara, I think you're right that it's not just it's both backward-looking, Donald”
Trump is seeking to put sort of flesh on the bones of his debunked conspiracy theories
about the 2020 election, that's a theme that runs through a lot of his second term is
to actually rewrite the outcome of the 2020 election and sort of the fever dream search for evidence to back up a claim, though there is no evidence, though they counted those ballots multiple times. I believe three different times the ballots in Fulton County were actually counted, including once by hand, nonetheless, there's this effort to kind of muddy the waters to make people
believe that there's some kind of an active question mark involving the 2020 election. So it's backward-looking, but you're right, to say that it's also forward-looking, and I think that's the part where it's not entirely clear, at least to me, yet why it is the Trump administration is seeking this voter data from all across the country, from state and local election officials, and what they would intend to do with it when they do receive
it, are they looking towards a mass purging of the voter roles or something like that?
Again, there's also, to me, this kind of chilling question of, are we looking at a kind of sneak preview of a future? If you really wanted to call into question, you know, elections, I mean, a scariest scenario that we've all heard talked about would be that the federal government, seizing upon some kind of pretext, ceases voting machines before elections are called.
I do think that's one of Trump's takeaways from 2020s. You've got to stop it before they counted, before the votes are certified, and make it maybe impossible in key contested elections to have people confident in results so that, you know, Congress, if the control of the House of Representatives is closer up in the air, you could actually see a scenario where they throw it into enough doubt, you know, that
you can't reliably certify the outcome. So lots of scary scenarios that the raid in Fulton County suggested to all of us, and then just one final thing to throw out here, because I would love to know what, you know, everyone thinks about this is the role of Tulsi Gabbard.
“My gosh, you know, it's not, I think we forgotten what a shocker that is to have the head”
of national intelligence, like in this country, that is a bright red line. You do not have intelligence officials whose job it is to collect foreign intelligence, involved, impotentially domestic intelligence gathering, and domestic political operations. Also, people had forgotten about her, but that was a holy shit thing. So let's need you on our dress up, but I also want to turn to Jerry Mandarin.
You've actually worked with multiple states on their redistricting. This situation is fluid, for example, the Virginia Supreme Court just allowed a special election on redistricting in the state that could lead to four more seats for Democrats. When we get to November, which party is most likely to gain the advantage of redistricting? I think the Republicans are going to gain a little bit, but not as much as they had hoped
for when they started down this path. And so I think Gavin Newsom's decision to Jerry Mandarin, California, then sort of was the firing shot for the Democrats so that they were willing to retaliate. Which frankly was not a predictable outcome. I mean, it wasn't sure that the Democrats would be able to get their act together, let alone,
that they'd be able to get it passed on these referendabouts. And we'll see whether that happens in Virginia. But if you sort of do the math, it looks like the Republicans may have gotten a few seats, but that's all with the caveat that we think that this is going to be a close election in the fall.
There's the possibility that this whole strategy backfires on the Republicans because they've spread their supporters too thinly, because that often happens when you draw these lines.
“The long term, though, I think there is reason to be concerned that now a pretty important”
norm has been broken, that incumbent parties can redraw the lines to their advantage if they don't like the way the electoral wins are blowing. If I could say one thing on the voter matching, because I think Susan said, well, we don't know what they're trying to do with the data that they're gathering from the states or they're requesting.
I think we do, which is, and it's exactly what Susan suggested, which is that they're going to use the data that they get from the states to match up against something like a doge database or a DHS database to then alleged that millions of people are ineligible that are on the roles. And whether it's people who are out of state, people who are died, people who have moved,
but it's one more sort of ingredient in the recipe to prove that the election is fraudulent even from the get-go.
And anyone who does these kinds of matchings and now we can attest to this, there's always
Errors.
In fact, there are usually more errors than there are positive identification of these
“false voters because people have the same names, people have the same birthdays, there's”
all kinds of things that you get screwed up and given the way that they've tried to sort of join together all these federal databases, you can easily see how that can be relevant if they're trying to go after the voter roles. And they want the data to create a pretext for alleging fraud. That's really what's happened in order to create a case even if it's species at the start.
Namely, the Trump administration is suing 24 states for that date, including California. And a lot of resistance to it, explain how those records are kept for people to understand and maintain at a county level and tell us how they could be misused if that was their goal if they're even going to get them.
So you all know that we do sell the voter role and it has to be for a specified purpose.
It needs to be for an election purpose, political, journalistic, or governmental purpose. And if you can't articulate what your purpose is, then you don't get a copy of the voter role. When you do receive one, it does not have key pieces of personal identifying information that we use for registration and that are used for more sophisticated list matching programs
like Eric. So very quickly, excitement, Eric is the electronic registration information center. It's a consortium of states that agree to share data and share resources for when voters do move across state lines. So you don't get image of the signature.
You do not get the last four of the social security.
You don't get the driver's license number. And I think that's where the fight is.
“I believe that the administration wants that personal identifying information and that is”
a recipe for identity theft. We take it really seriously. We do not give out that information to anyone and it is maintained through in California anyway, through an election management system that is connected to the statewide database. There is information that is flowing in between and the registration role changes daily.
So when you get a voter role, that is what people were registered at that moment. It could be some people die in the next day or become disqualified for some other reason. So the night is absolutely right. And how could it be misused by the administration if scenario give me one scenario? Well, I mean, it could be mistakenly like a voter's file could be mistakenly matched to
someone who may be in what's known as the save database. If you give me, I don't know the exact acronym, but the save database is kept by the federal
“government and it has a list of folks who are not citizens.”
There could be a situation where it erroneously, you know, it targets that person as being a non citizen. Can I just jump in on this whole question and matching it's, I want to reiterate something Susan said at the outset, which is that you can't sort of look at each one of these steps in isolation as if this is a cause for some particular action that's going to happen on
election day. All of this is sort of spreading bets as how you might create doubt in the election, both going in and then afterwards. And so if the narrative that comes out of these voter matching efforts is that there's all these non citizens there on the roles or dead people on the roles or that's just somehow
all screwed up that that's the narrative you take in to cast out on the election, there will be, you know, court action if efforts are trying to purge people from the roles or if it leads to challenges in the polling places. But each one of these things that's happening, whether you're talking about Fulton County, you're talking about the matching or other kinds of efforts with these executive orders
is all about creating that kind of ground for contesting the election beforehand. Alright, which is the point, we'll be back in a minute. Support for the show comes from Framer. If you're a business owner, you know that a website should help your business grow. If updates to your dot com feel harder than they should, Framer is the shortcut you've been
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Kick off the new year, right, and save up to 52% off with the code [email protected]. That's code Cara K-A-R-A at groans-G-R-U-N-S dot CO. So, let's talk about the actual lexin themselves, and one of the main fears for Democrats is that Trump will use ice or national guard to physically intimidate voters, who would that look like in practice, and what's the likelihood that it'll happen and where?
Well, that's right. You're not necessarily going to see this happening all over the country. One of the things about our elections over the last few decades, rate is the gradual winnowing down of competitive districts and states in the country, and I think that's one
of the reason this incredible polarization is one of the reasons why we're having this
crisis in the first place.
“But it also means that if you want to go after the elections, you don't--you have”
a more limited number of places where you need to do it, and in that respect, I thought it was really notable that Trump a few weeks ago said that he talked about--he wanted to nationalize--he used that phrase nationalized election in 15 states. Now, he didn't say what 15 states are--where's that number coming from? In recent years at the presidential level, we've shrunk down to basically six states or
even three states that have made the difference in the last several presidential elections. So we all know what those states are that are competitive states out of few more states where there are highly competitive congressional districts or Senate races, and maybe that's how Donald Trump got to 15. And again, to be clear, the Constitution is silent.
Now, many things was very not silent on the notion that the states that have the responsibility to regulate the time-place and manner of elections. So that's first of all. But that same week, Trump was talking about nationalization. You also had Steve Bannon, you know, Maga Pondcaster, former Trump strategist out there
saying, you know, let's be clear, let's send ice right to the polling places, and we're not going to let Democrats steal this election again. If you combine these sort of threats to, in effect, militarize polling places, and again,
You wouldn't have to do it all over the country, but just in targeted places ...
might be immigrant voters.
“What's the likelihood where it will happen that they have this plan?”
I mean, Steve Bannon says a lot of things, but exactly. Yeah. So what's the likelihood, do you see?
Well, I mean, first of all, we have to say that Trump has already made a clear in how
he has been deploying these ice forces already. He's using them in Democratic cities and Democratic states as an instrument of sort of retribution and effect or punishment of his political enemies. So, you know, they would be looking to do this in places where there are large numbers of potential immigrant voters who might be scared off by the presence of ice.
And, you know, Democratic run cities are off in the places in the past that Donald Trump has targeted with his rhetoric. For example, Pennsylvania has been a key swing state, you know, in all of our recent elections. Donald Trump has been crying fraud in Philadelphia practically before anyone's voted. They are same thing in Detroit, in Michigan, which has a key Senate race on the ballot,
as well as various contested house races this fall.
“So, again, I think we know the map of where they might go after pretty clearly.”
Yeah. Can I have a note of optimism here? Yeah. Yes. I'm going to ask it is because Trump, as he said, said he wants to nationalize election.
Is that just legal bluster? But go ahead, saying. Yeah. He can't nationalize the elections as Susan said. Right.
The Constitution says that the state legislatures are the ones that are in charge of elections. And so he can't take over the elections, but, you know, the U.S. Postal Service for
example is always involved in elections.
And so the federal government does have a role. So what else could he do? Sending troops to the polls, obviously, etc. What are the most effective legal? Well, I'm actually kind of optimistic that the number of seats that are going to be
competitive in the fall will make it very difficult to sort of target particular areas. And so, you know, if it's a presidential election, we know what those seven battleground states are, but with this election, they're going to be up to, you know, 30 to 50, maybe even more competitive congressional races. So it's going to be difficult to try to target each one of the polling places.
Not only is there a kind of geographic difficulty there, but there's also a temporal problem,
which is that we don't just vote on election day.
Right. And so we're going to have weeks where people are going to be able to be voting and those votes will then be, you know, banked in offices like Natalie. And so I do think that it's easy to be concerned about these tweets because they're so unprecedented.
But there's a lot of things that would make it very difficult for the federal government to try to take over local elections. So January 6 showed that Trump can use social media to summon his supporters, obviously. You can imagine him telling them to go protect the polling sites, and that sort of ambiguous language gives him a veneer of plausible deniability.
Natalie, in 2020, a so-called Trump train of around 300 people held a rally in the parking line outside your office and blocked the ballot drop box. Tell us what that was like and what you could do if similar situation occurred. Yeah, that was, I have to say, I felt a little intimidated myself, just for a little bit
“of context, it was, I believe a Sunday afternoon and we had just sent out all the ballots”
by mail and I went to the office just to catch up on a couple of things and it was, you know, relatively quiet until about three o'clock and then I heard this rumble on the outside. I saw a bunch of cars and they had set up a merch booth with a bunch of Trump branded merchandise, there was a megaphone talking to people about who to vote for, and you know,
free speech is something that elections and officials value, but there are rules around doing so around the voting location and we had a drop box that people wanted to use but felt they could not access, you know, when they could not physically access it because there were a bunch of cars blocking the way, but some people who would try to walk up to the drop box did not feel like they could and, you know, that is a clear violation of the law.
Normally I would go out to folks and say, you know, there's a drop box here, can you please move your activities to, you know, a hundred feet or more away, but because I was alone and because there were so many people, it was a situation where I did not feel like I could, you know, sort of go out there on my own and no one else was in the county building. So, you know, moving forward, you know, I think that we advertise where all of the locations
are and we were pretty closely with our local law enforcement to let them know here is where
People vote and a voting location does include an official vote by mail drop ...
law reflects that you cannot do any election hearing activities or, you know, sort of any political
protests within that sort of a hundred foot boundary. So, imagine if the Trump trains activating our election day on a large scale.
“You know, I think that, you know, part of my job is not only to preserve the right to vote,”
but also preserve rights and, you know, what I have told people time and again is, you know, your rights do not compete with each other. You have the right to political speech, just as you have the right to vote, but there are really good reasons why there is that buffer zone around voting location. It's because this country's history of voter intimidation around the polls,
it used to be way, way back in the day that you could election air right outside the door and it
turned out that, you know, sort of created some chaos around voting locations. So, what is your preparation? You are nervous to go out and fix the problem. So, people presumably weren't able to vote because if they wanted to, so people were being denied the right to vote. Right. And it's your plan. Yeah. And that particular situation, what we had done as we had worked with the local Republican Party to make sure that those rallies
“did not occur in sort of key locations anymore. Could, could you stop them now? Well, yeah,”
I mean, we could, you know, sort of certainly try. It is a violation of the law to, you know, purposefully election near for the purpose of intimidating folks. And so we would just call the police and they wouldn't take care of it. I do not believe that there's a history of that happening in Marin County. Most kinds of election during their passive. It's like someone's campaign button or a shirt. And, you know, we politely say to the voter, can you just please remove that button
while you are here or turn your shirt inside out? Some people have taken the extra step of just stripping. We don't encourage that, but, you know, it does allow folks to use it if you're comfortable in the voting location and that they can vote, commonly, and free of intimidation. So if 2020 is any guy Trump may do the most damage after the votes are cast, if armed federal agents showed up to an election administration site with a warrant of man for ballots, like they didn't
fold in county. Talk about how to stop that and how easy your heart would it be for the FBI to obtain another warrant. How do you deal with that Susan? You know, I've spoken with election experts, Cara, who say that the key is, you know, to be prepared in advance. I was even, you know, speaking with one election law expert who suggested that one approach, some people will take this year as to get injunction to in advance to try to stop activity that they fear from the federal
“government. You know, again, I'm not a lawyer, but I think heightened alert obviously has been”
achieved here, but you know, I was really struck by it was almost an off-hand comment that Trump made a few weeks ago in an interview with the New York Times that, you know, suggested that we may be, once again, overly limiting our imaginations as to what is possible here. If you're, you know, dealing with people who are willing to just absolutely go completely outside of the lines of what we see as acceptable. And to that end, I was really kind of blown away in his recent interview with
the New York Times, Trump said as an aside, oh, I really made a mistake in not ordering the federal government to seize election machines after the 2020 election. And, you know, this is essentially the almost martial law scenario that was being promoted by, you know, Sydney Powell and Michael Flynn and, you know, a lot of really just wild extremists who had Trump's ear in the aftermath of the 2020 election, but who, you know, were constrained because there were others such as the White House
Council at the time, the Attorney General at the time, you know, who were indicating they wouldn't
go along with these extreme measures. But how amazing that Trump is now saying out loud, yeah,
I wish I had seized voting machines, you know, after 2020. I mean, imagine, we all know the mayhem that ensued on January 6. Imagine the mayhem if there weren't any duly certified results from certain states. I mean, that's the thing is that what Trump did in 2020 was extraordinary. And that was in a situation where there were no massive, you know, in any way proof of fraud, there were no court decisions anywhere in the country saying, you know, a questioning the overall
Results of state elections.
results in 2020. Every single state met met the deadline and certify the results. I think what Trump
“has learned and somebody wants comparative to me to like the Velociraptors in Jurassic Park,”
you know, learning how to open the door. What Trump seems to have learned from 2020 is seize the machines, stop it before those results get certified. Stop the count. In other words, yeah. So that link California every voter for people that know is sent a mail in ballot and the vote counting can be slow. And that's to the advantage of Trump. Explain how vote counting works in a state like California. And you're, explain your experience in 2012 about your team or
counting the votes. Sure. So before I do that, I just want to sort of circle back on on on the voting equipment and, you know, sort of seizure of election materials. That would be a serious problem. Election security includes a strict chain of custody on voting equipment and on ballots. And,
“you know, sort of specific to this issue, you know, I have asked, you know, our, our county council”
to provide me and my staff of training on what to do if we see a warrant and what to look for because, I mean, frankly, I don't know about you, but I've watched a lot of cop shows and there may be a disconnect with what I understand a warrant to be and, you know, you know, what, what you see on on television. So I want to be really clear that, you know, for me and my colleagues
and likely for my peers across this country, if a warrant comes in, the first call is going to be
to our attorneys and to sort of see, you know, what the scope is of what we are dealing with. And not handing it over. Well, I mean, I want to stress that I'm an administrator that, you know, I know the law, I can tell people what the law is. And in some cases, I can even enforce the law
“and, you know, with the warrant or sort of in a new world, but it would be, you know, sort of,”
very disruptive to the election's process to not have voting equipment. It would probably be an expensive problem too. I cannot imagine that our Secretary of State would continue to allow us to use equipment that was seized and broke the chain of custody. But as you had stated, a lot of
people vote by mail in California, anywhere, you know, from, you know, 80 to 90 percent of the
electorate that participates chooses to vote by mail. And that process does require added verification. So, you know, in this state, we give voters plenty of time to submit a ballot. We send them out 29 days prior to the election. After the election, if the voter chooses to submit that ballot by mail, then we basically have seven days to accept a timely postmarked ballot. And, you know, sometimes people forget to sign or, you know, the signature does not compare with what we have on files,
so we need to reach out to the voter. And so, you know, one of the dynamics that's happening that we, you know, try to ameliorate with through our messaging, please vote early. But what we see in California, at least, is a lot of people are choosing to cast a ballot in an envelope, you know, by mail, you know, with an official Dropbox on election day. And then it turned around and say, why haven't you counted this yet? It's because we go through the process of verifying that,
you know, you haven't voted already that, you know, the signature that you submit, like I said at the top, you know, people provide identification when they register. And they're often registering through the department of motor vehicles. So when you sign, it's got to match what we have on file. And sometimes people drop stuff or they just put their initials or print, they don't sign. And it takes a lot of time to sometimes reach out to the voter. So let's assume the elections
themselves are relatively uneventful. But while the counting is underway, Trump plays these cards. We've just discussed the FBI season about, see Stokes conspiracy theories and his supporters make life hell for people counting the votes, like Natalie. And Speaker Johnson refuses to seat elected members because of the results are illegitimate so that Republicans maintain control the house. What happens then? Let's start with Nate then Natalie then Susan.
All right. So technically, what happens is that the Congress is impaneled on January 3rd. They each one of these folks comes with their sort of certificates of election saying here I'm the person who won this. And so in the ordinary course of things, you would have certain people who would
Be sort of clearly members of Congress would then vote if there's someone who...
elections of each one of the other members of Congress. And so there have been times in our history
“where Congress, which is empowered on the Constitution to determine the qualifications of its members,”
then rejects the certificate of someone and says they can't be seated. The promise we'd never
been in the situation where who controls Congress is actually in doubt. The first votes that are taken are to appoint the speakers. So we don't necessarily even have a speaker. And so we are walking in totally new constitutional snow at that point. Right. This is a very different situation than even the January 6th uprising from five years ago. And so the question is whether, say, after the election, but before Congress is going to be seated, whether there's somehow a new law
that would be passed that would try to deal with this issue of seating electors who allegedly were elected under fraudulent conditions. And which they could do unless they don't have the unless people resist it presumably. It's not clear what's going to happen. If all these people show up, and then there's an effort to say that there is no majority. The question is whether there will be new rules passed in the lame duck period that then would give my Johnson,
I'm President of the power. But generally speaking, the House disappears after the election, and then it has to reappear on January 3rd, according to the processes that they've been placed for over 200 years. Right. But then we are in really dangerous territory. Right. And then we're talking about an election that was run. And then as in other parts of the world, some of a leader then rejects the elections and then tries to cancel the vote. Right. What about you, Natalie? How do
you look at this? I assume that folks up to this point who have doubts would have come to an office
“like mine. And I think, you know, one of the most important things that we do is elections officials”
is we open up the process to the public. You can see how we are processing ballots. You can see how many ballots that we have under the California vote of Bill of Rights. You have the right to ask questions about the elections process and receive answers from the elections official. And we spend a lot of time educating the public. So if there was some sort of doubt as to the election results, I would assume that we would have a high level of contact with our lawyers with the secretary of
state. We may be asked to provide statements to the court or, you know, even testify as to our process. And this all would very likely happen once the election results would be certified in California. We've got up to 30 days to to certify many of us are done before then. But yeah, we would have to,
you know, continue to do what we always do, which is show our work. Well, let me just say
that it's not as if the courts are going to be silent in this, right? I mean, in the event that there's an effort to try to undermine the vote. But you're going to see action before the election, you'll see action on election day. And then you're going to see actions afterwards in the event that there's an effort to undermine the vote. And the courts have been a kind of shining light on in election litigation. But in a bipartisan way, you've seen Trump appointed judges,
you know, Obama appointed judges have been sort of buttressing our democracy. Right. So speaking of China, just for people don't know, Natalie has had mage observers demanding to stand closer using binoculars, taking pictures of signatures and borderline harassing you and and voters just just to be clear. But Susan, go ahead on this question. Yeah, I mean, look,
great. We're already in a dark place because we're trying to contemplate scenarios that have never
happened before in American history. So that's part of it, right? It is just we're off the grid here.
“I think, again, certification is really key. As it was in 2020, it's also true. It's not just”
at the presidential level, but also House and Senate races have to be certified by the state. So we don't know the map yet of what would be contested. But, you know, the scenario where talking about here is presumably where the House of Representatives were control is very close. And so it would depend actually to a certain extent on in what states are the races that are very close because if those are states that have democratic governors and democratic state election
officials and democratic legislatures, it's going to be very hard to do what the Trump administration might want to do. If those are states that are more, you know, evenly divided or where there's Republican officials, okay, then the questions, what kind of Republican officials we've seen by the way, Republican officials in many states, even if they supported Trump at the national level,
Who have had more backbone than their national colleagues, not just in Georgi...
but also look at what happened in Indiana where Republicans, very conservative,
Republicans refused Trump's efforts to redo the district line. So it depends on the map number one. Number two, I would just also point out that Mike Johnson is also already barely in control of the U.S. House of Representatives. So to Nate's point about, you know, could you rewrite the
“rules before January 3rd before the new Congress? I think that would already be very, very hard”
to do. In fact, there's actually a scenario where over the next few months Mike Johnson and the Republicans lose control of the House of Representatives even before the November election. He's down to one vote right now, you know, in the natural process of a few hundred people, many of them older, you could have, you know, someone resigning Congress, a resignation, and a death, and then all of a sudden you're talking about Democrats even possibly being in control
or Republicans, you know, dumping Mike Johnson who already doesn't have a lot of confidence among many of the members and picking someone else. So, you know, Trump may want to do this. He doesn't have a lot of juice is what you're saying. Yeah, we'll be back in a minute. Support for the show comes from Core Weave. Everywhere you look, AI is expanding what we thought was possible, and at the center of it all is Core Weave. Medical research and diagnosis,
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I was not. In 2001 Electro-Fahrzeuge, and this was an immermeer, based on the plan of Fahrzeuge, our Leverpartner in the EU and Großbritannian, was ended in 2026. All right, let's wrap up by looking forward to election threats we've facing, even after the mid-term, the Supreme Court appears ready to gut section two of the Voting Rights Act.
The ruling could come too late for the states to redraw their districts in time for the mid-terms, but the consequence could be dire for Democrats in 2021 in future elections. Nate, game is out for us.
“What do the Democrats' chances in the House look like without section two of the Voting Rights Act?”
Well, if the laws of political physics haven't been completely unended in the last 10 years, the Democrats should win somewhere between 20 and 40 seats, which is to say that with it, people are having a pretty low view of the economy and low presidential approval, that that should be the kind of expected shift in the House. Now, Jerry Mandarin may blunt some of the natural forces that would lead to a democratic takeover
in a midterm election, but the amount of advantage that Republicans are getting is not that significant. Over the long term, when you're talking about the decline of section two, this has been the main piece of legislation that has provided for majority minority districts,
For minority opportunity districts.
So the Black and Latino communities are able to get many more districts than they would otherwise.
Because the Supreme Court has said that partisan jarring Mandarin doesn't raise any constitutional questions, it's statues like the Voting Rights Act that have been the bull work that have prevented certain types of jarring Mandarin. I do think the Supreme Court is going to gut section two of the VRA.
“I think the writing is on the wall, and so that means that we may see some more redistricting”
maybe after this election, as well as, as we, you know, come into the 2030 round of redistricting. Right. So so far, election officials have played it pretty straight. Republicans like Secretary of State Brad Raffinsberger and Georgia who's running for governor and Stephen Richer, the former Maricopa County recorder did their jobs in 2020,
despite intense pressure from Trump and fellow Republicans. That might not always be the case.
Natalie, if the election official wanted to corrupt an election, could they do it, or would it be too obvious? Not that you would. I know. I know we would never. And I mean, that's that's serious. We all do take an oath to defend the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of, you know, our respective states. So breaking that oath is a serious issue, it would take a lot of planning. It would not go unnoticed. As we saw in the case, for example,
with Tina Peters, clearly got caught. And, you know, when I read a story about Tina Peters, it was just shocking to me that any industry would come around for people. Yes, yeah, Mesa County, Colorado, it's shocking to me that anyone would really sort of go to that
“lengths. So, you know, we in California, we do have, I think, a very strong cohort that is constantly”
in contact. We are also in contact, you know, on a regular basis was Secretary of State. And we all talk about what the rules are. In a place like California, you have a lot of local control over how elections are running. But, you know, we're all operating under the same laws. And, you know, we know what each other is doing. And I would venture to guess because, you know, I'm, I'm like Benis and I assume that my colleagues are the same way. If you're doing something that is way
off-base, we'll let you know, hey, what? Um, right. So, you're saying it would be very difficult from Dr. Ministries to purpose. Oh, yeah, it would be extremely difficult for it to go unnoticed. Okay. So, one of the ways it gets notices through the press, Trump's attacks on the press have been unrelenting, as I know, as Susan knows, many of the legacy media's owners are caving him just today. CBS is cutting off an interview with James Tallarico, because Brandon Carson, giant.
Check us. But for a large portion of the electric facts don't seem to matter, James Madison wrote that a popular government without popular information, or the means of acquiring it is, but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy, or perhaps both, uh, very fancy quote, but absolutely folds up. Susan, how do you think about your role in the news media's role more broadly, is that a prologue to a farce a tragedy or both? Yeah, look, Donald Trump himself in the 2024 election campaign said,
if we don't have free speech, we don't have a country period. And it's in against that backdrop, a very cynical statement, really, when you consider the broad array of attacks that Trump has launched not just on the integrity of the uh, a electoral process, but uh, you know, you could argue that it's going after in a pretty systematic way Americans free speech rights that have been a signature move of this president. And of course, that's all in the context of uh, maintaining power and uh,
“you know, using it. And I think that, you know, for Trump, he sees the stakes in this fall”
election as very significant to him while some people will downplay it and say, well, what difference doesn't really make if Democrats take back the house, you can say that Donald Trump believes that makes a big difference. He himself has repeatedly almost obsessively already begun talking about it. He says that Democrats will impeach him once again. If they take back the house that, you know, he understands there will be not only uh, potential impeachment, but there will
be oversight hearings. There will be Congress acting in a different way. It might cause him also to lose the hold over the Republican who remain on Capitol Hill, who he's cow. No, it's existential. It's clear he understands it's absolutely. So number one, it's existential. Number two, it's the lies and disinformation that have fueled Donald Trump and his movement from the beginning and of course, it's lies about an election that are at the heart of this presidency. The New York
Times called Trump's second term, the January 6 presidency. Well, that means it's a story about
Lying about an election that is the foundational ideological belief of the pe...
this country right now. And so it's in that context that I think, you know, we have this
responsibility as journalists. And again, Carol, I see that as a very non-partisan thing in the same way that our election officials, you know, need to have rules of the road that are not benefiting Democrats or Republicans, you know, but that it's, you know, essentially a technocratic role in our democracy without it. We can't have confidence in it. I feel the same way about journalism, you know, reporting independently without fear of favor doesn't mean saying
that there's an equivalent between our two parties or everything that comes out of the mouth of a candidate has to be weighed in that context. It means being able to speak without fear of favor. And I worry that it in too many communities around the country, including sadly, the community you and I live in, the Washington DC, which is lost. It's reporting about state and local elections. You know, my husband spent more than a decade reporting for the
metro section of the Washington Post, including from Richmond, Virginia, the capital of Virginia. You know, we're losing our independent reporting about elections at exactly the moment their challenge by the people who are running the country. So, you know, obviously the role of journalism
“is an important one to spotlight in terms of the integrity of the elections. So, one of the things”
that's interesting is, you know, after they, they dumped this James Telereco interview on the
broadcast network CBS Aquiest instantly, they put it on YouTube a second later, which I thought was
hysterical. I was like, "Hey, have you heard of the internet kids?" In any case, my last question, there doesn't necessarily have to be anything dramatic like ICE agents patrolling voting sites or FBI agents taking ballots for Trump's prolonged assault on our democracy work between Jerry Mandarin, voter role burges, ID laws designed to suppress turnout, the gutting of voting rights act, whatever Trump does around the mid-terms we could see American democracy severely damaged by
1,000 cuts. How do we avoid that, Spate? Let's hear from Susan Nate and Natalie, you get the last word. Thanks, Cara. I mean, you know, look, that's the thing about us journalists, right? We don't have to, we're not as good at prescriptions as we are at analysis and describing the problem rather than fixing it. And I feel like that's the role for us to play in this democratic small decreases that we have right now. You know, I will say that in other countries that I've observed and reporting from
Russia during, you know, the beginning of Latere Putin's tenure in other countries around the world where you've experienced democratic small-d rollbacks. It's, it's the rule of civil society coming together and journalism in my view, independent journalism is part of civil society. Americans just aren't used to talking in those terms. We tend to actually buy into this very polarized like there's Democrats and there's Republicans. And frankly, the interest of the Democratic Party
capital D isn't always the same as the interest of the democracy small-d. And, you know,
I feel like this is a moment for civil society to come together in a pretty widespread and sweeping
“way and not to wait until it's too late. Because I think that that's what happened after Donald”
Trump was first sworn in last year that you didn't see that kind of civil society coming together the resistance of people understanding that they needed to act collectively and stand up collectively for democratic values, that if that doesn't happen, a lot of the things that we're warning about in this podcast may come to pass, okay? Nate? So a lot has to happen before we get to that apocalypse. I think that viewers and listeners need to understand that the courts have been
quite active in particularly protecting the vote. And so while there's all kinds of executive orders and other kinds of threats that are being posed in this pre-election period, you know, the system, you know, I remain optimistic that the system is going to hold. I think over the long run that there is damage that has now been done, which is that people have lost confidence in the election infrastructure. And so long as elites send that message that voters can't trust that their ballots
“will be counted, that I think that that long-term distrust of the mechanics of American democracy”
is something to be concerned about. But as has been sort of the lesson over the last year, it's very difficult right now about nine or ten months away from the election to predict what we're going to be talking about then. And so what I tell my students is that I can't tell you that there's light at the end of the tunnel, but I can only tell you that they're going to be other tunnels. Okay, Natalie? Sure. I appreciate the question because I mean, I hear a lot of crazy stuff that
could affect the work. And there's a lot of things that give me hope. And you know, one of the big
Things is, you know, I'm just going to take it back to my colleagues, both he...
and, you know, in my office and across the nation, we care very deeply about a free and fair
“elections process where voters get to participate if they choose to do so. And then we count ballots”
to being fullest extent to the law. Unfortunately, nowadays we, you know, sort of become more like referees than anything else, but the level of planning and detail and care that we put into
every single election, even in the face of, you know, it intense harassment and intimidation,
even threats in some cases, we are dedicated to this process. And, you know, I would encourage
“anyone who has any questions to come into our office, look at our operations, see what we do.”
We all open up the process. So people can have the opportunity to come and see the level of detail
and verification that we pour into every election. We care about getting it right. We're, you know,
often, you know, force to keep from getting too distracted by the politics of it all and we'll continue to do so for this election and for all future elections. All right, thank you all so much. I really appreciate you for joining us. It's really important to talk about these issues and relatively common extensive ways so people understand their things they could do. And Natalie, I have to say,
“I believe in the markets because people, like you, who are doing these work, it's quite all the”
difficulties. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. Thanks, Robyn. Yeah, thank you so much. It is heartening, Natalie, and an optimist. I like to hear that. I'm Natalie. Absolutely. I appreciate it. Today's show was produced by Christian Castro Assel, Michelle Aloy, Megan Bernie, and Kaylin Lynch. Nishat Kruitt is Vox Media's executive producer of podcasts, special thanks to Amin Wellen and Madeleine Leplant, Dooby. Our engineers are Fernando Aruda and Rick Quant,
and our theme music is by Tracodemics. If you're already following the show, we get to keep our democracy. If not, we still get to keep our democracy. We're not backing down and please go vote. Go wherever listen a podcast search for on with Keroswisher and hit follow. Thanks for listening to on with Keroswisher from podium media, New York Magazine, the Vox Media podcast network, and us will be back on Monday with more.
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