
Last year, Trump administration officials explored a formal proposal to ban electronic voting machines used in more than 25 states following the 2020 election.
The plan, spearheaded by White House adviser Kurt Olsen, sought to classify machines from companies like Dominion as a national security risk. This push relied on widely debunked conspiracy theories claiming the software was compromised by foreign actors or rigged to flip votes. The effort ultimately collapsed because security experts and legal teams could find no evidence of systemic fraud to justify a sweeping federal intervention.
These revelations are now intensifying the debate over the legal limits of executive power in interfering with state-run election processes.
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