Homeland Security Secretary Mullin reiterates Trump threats about elections
Key Points:
- Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin reiterated President Trump's hardline stance on election reform, threatening repercussions for states that do not comply and individuals accused of misleading the public during the 2020 election.
- Mullin focused on four states—California, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Nevada—accusing them of having hundreds of thousands of non-citizens on voter rolls, though no evidence was provided to substantiate these claims.
- The administration plans to withhold federal funds from states that fail to implement election security measures, such as securing voting machines and cleaning voter registration lists.
- Trump and Mullin criticized major TV networks for not airing Trump's primetime speech live, with Mullin accusing them of participating in a cover-up, while FCC officials condemned threats to revoke broadcast licenses as unconstitutional.
- Election experts widely dismiss claims of widespread non-citizen voting and caution that Trump's efforts to nationalize election administration conflict with constitutional provisions granting states authority over elections.