Trump Ousts Remaining Members Of The Election Assistance Commission Ahead: Trump Fires Remaining Election Assistance Commission Members Weeks Before Midterms
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President Donald Trump has removed the last remaining members of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, a federal agency created specifically to help states run secure and accurate elections, in a move that has drawn sharp criticism from election security experts and Democratic officials.
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The firings leave the EAC without any confirmed commissioners at a particularly sensitive moment, with the 2026 midterm election cycle already underway and states relying on the agency for guidance, funding oversight, and voting system certification.
A quiet agency with an outsized role
The EAC was established under the Help America Vote Act of 2002, passed in the wake of the disputed 2000 presidential election. Its core responsibilities include certifying voting systems, distributing federal election security grants to states, and publishing voluntary guidelines that election administrators across the country use to standardize their processes.
The commission is designed to be bipartisan, with four seats split evenly between Republicans and Democrats. Commissioners require Senate confirmation, and the agency has historically operated with little public attention but significant behind-the-scenes influence on how elections are administered at the state and local level.
Trump’s decision to remove the remaining members follows a broader pattern of executive action targeting independent and quasi-independent federal bodies. The White House has not publicly detailed the specific grounds for the dismissals.
What the timing means
Election administrators are already deep into preparations for 2026. States are testing and certifying new voting equipment, drawing on EAC resources and technical assistance. Without a functioning commission, voting system certifications could stall, and states may lose access to federal guidance on emerging security threats.
Critics argue the timing is not accidental. Removing the commissioners now creates a window of institutional uncertainty precisely when states are making consequential decisions about their election infrastructure.
Democratic officials and several nonpartisan election security organizations have called the move a direct threat to election integrity. Some Republican state election officials have also quietly raised concerns, given how much their offices depend on EAC technical support.
A contested legal question
Whether a president has the legal authority to remove EAC commissioners at will is not settled. The Help America Vote Act includes provisions designed to insulate the commission from direct political pressure, and legal challenges to the firings are expected.
The Supreme Court’s recent decisions expanding presidential removal power could complicate those challenges, but the specific statutory language governing the EAC gives opponents a credible argument that these dismissals were unlawful.
For now, the agency is effectively headless going into one of the most closely watched midterm cycles in recent memory, and no timeline for nominating replacements has been announced.
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