Trump seeks takeover of elections in a bid for more presidential power
Rooted in the presidents false claims of election fraud, Trumps executive order is illustrative of governing through dictates rather than legislation.
Almost no part of government is immune from President Donald Trumps thirst for power and control. Last week he signed executive orders aimed at the Smithsonian Institution, the District of Columbia and the administration of elections. No president has sought more change in more institutions more rapidly, through executive orders than Trump.
The order on elections is more than 2,500 words and at times densely written. It may have received less attention than warranted as it was issued amid the controversy over how sensitive military operational details were shared in a Signal chat group that accidentally included Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor in chief of the Atlantic.
The order is illustrative of how the president is attempting to govern, largely through dictates rather than legislation. It is rooted in Trumps long-standing, though false, claims that the election system is rife with fraud. Its legal foundations are questionable. But like other executive orders the president has signed, it could produce chaos and change before it is fully litigated.
Trumps reach for power overrides any ideological consistency, though there is nothing new in that. He is dismantling the Department of Education, arguing that states and local governments should run the nations schools (which they already do). Now he is attempting to order state and local election administrators to adopt his rules for running future elections.
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