Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Trump doubles down on baseless claims that mail-in voting is ‘corrupt’, undermines voting machines

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Trump doubles down on baseless claims that mail-ballots are ‘corrupt’

In his press conference with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Donald Trump has spent a chunk of time answering a question about his earlier threats to end mail-in voting and the use of voting machines. He said today that “we’re going to start with an executive order that’s being written right now by the best lawyers in the country to end mail-in ballots because they’re corrupt.”

It was a winding detour where he repeated a conspiracy that Democrats prefer mail-in voting because it’s “the only way they can get elected”, and to promote what he described as “transgender for everybody”, “open borders” and crime – which he says is a “new thing they [Democrats] love”.

The president’s remarks included a number of false claims. Namely that the US is “just about the only country in the world” that uses mail-in ballots. Dozens of western democracies use mail-in voting, including Canada, the UK, and Germany. Most European countries offer some form of mail voting, and over 100 countries let their citizens vote by mail when living abroad, according to data from International IDEA. The president has, in the past, voted by mail.

Trump also said that voting machines are inefficient and costly, adding that paper ballots allow for results to be released “the same night”. Election officials and experts routinely say this is inaccurate. Stephen Richer, the former recorder of Maricopa county in Arizona, debunked a number of the president’s falsehoods about voting machines.

Richer characterised machines as “highly accurate. And fast. And cheap,” in a post on X today responding to the president’s earlier comments. Similarly, a recent report from the Brennan Center for Justice found that “hand counts are not only less accurate, they take more time than machines, which delays election results.” The report adds that voting machines also save tax payers money.

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Twenty-one attorneys general sue Trump administration for withholding funds for crime victims

The Democratic attorneys general for 20 states and DC have filed a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration today, arguing that it is withholding funding for crime victims if states don’t comply with “unrelated immigration enforcement efforts”.

The suit, filed in Rhode Island, alleges the justice department is not releasing more than one billion dollars in congressionally appropriated funds (provided through the Victims of Crime Act) in order to “strong-arm States into supporting the Administration’s immigration policies”.

“The department tasked with ensuring justice for all is targeting victims and survivors as they attempt to navigate some of the most difficult times of their lives,” the Rhode Island attorney general Peter Neronha said in a statement. “We can and must support crime victims, and support must not be illegally tethered to federal policies. We are on the right side of the law here, and we will prevail.”

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