Trump signs order on mail ballots, escalating election overhaul push

President Donald Trump signs an executive order on mail ballots in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Tuesday. The order tightens restrictions on mail ballots and directs the creation of voter lists in each state.

President Donald Trump signs an executive order on mail ballots in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Tuesday. The order tightens restrictions on mail ballots and directs the creation of voter lists in each state. (Evan Vucci, Reuters)


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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday aimed ​at tightening mail-in voting rules nationwide, including by directing his administration to create a list of confirmed citizens eligible to ‌vote in each state, and said he did not see how the measure could be challenged.

The ⁠order would use federal data to ​help state election officials verify who ⁠is eligible to vote in their jurisdictions. It would also require ‌absentee ballots to be ‌sent only to voters on each state's approved mail-in ballot list ⁠and mandate secure ballot envelopes with ⁠unique tracking barcodes.

Any move to force changes to state-run election systems is likely to face immediate legal challenges.

Trump said only a judge could block the order and complained that there were many "rogue" and "very bad" judges. "I don't see how they can challenge it," he said about the ‌executive order.

The Republican president for years has held ​to his false claim that his 2020 election defeat was the result of widespread voter fraud and has called for a tightening of rules for voting by mail ahead of the November midterm elections, when his party will be trying to defend its narrow majorities in Congress.

His vocal opposition to voting by mail did not stop Trump ​from casting his own vote that way in a special election in Florida last ‌week. Asked about ‌it, ⁠he said he cast a ballot by mail recently "because I'm president" and "I had a lot of different things" to do.

He has previously used executive action to direct federal agencies to help states verify voter citizenship and sought to ‌bar states from counting ​mail ballots received after Election Day, a ‌direct challenge to election ⁠procedures traditionally ​set by the states.

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