XPost: alt.law-enforcement.corruption, alt.politics.immigration, alt.politics.republicans
XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
Democrats stand to be greatly harmed if they abide by Trump�s new election integrity order, which is why they�re taking him to court.
A battle appears to be looming between President Donald Trump and the
entire upper echelon of the national Democratic Party over Trump�s
election Executive Order (EO) 14248. The order was signed on March 25,
2025, and entitled �Preserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Elections.� EO 14248 addresses key election integrity deficiencies
involving voter eligibility, ballot fraud, foreign interference, and accountability for wrongdoing. It also implements sorely needed mechanisms
to assess the accuracy of voter rolls and the security of voting machines.
EO 14248 was immediately challenged by the �Who�s Who?� of the Democrat
Party. Nineteen attorneys general filed a complaint in Massachusetts,
while four top Democrat Party organizations filed their complaint in Washington, D.C., along with three civic groups. All similarly challenge certain parts of the election EO with only slightly different arguments.
Constitutional Arguments
At issue is the president�s constitutional power regarding elections. The complainants argue that elections are under the exclusive jurisdiction of
the states according to a selective reading of Art. I Sec. IV of U.S. Constitution. The plaintiffs fail to acknowledge the second sentence: �but
the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations, except
as to the Place of Chusing [sp.] Senators.�
Thus, Congress, not the states, has ultimate jurisdiction over federal elections. That clause birthed the National Voting Rights Act (1965), the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA, 1993) and the Help America Vote Act (HAVA, 2002). Despite the clear, plain text of the U.S. Constitution, the attorneys general boldly state twice in their brief that their states will
not adhere to those laws because: �Plaintiff States intend to administer federal elections according to State laws ��
Article II, Section II explains the general power of the president in providing: �� he shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed ��
Thus, the president has unquestioned authority to order that the Executive Branch take any steps necessary to ensure federal and state laws regarding
any matter is upheld. That is precisely what EO 14248 does. The EO
contains nine key sections, each of which issues Executive Branch orders, carefully crafted with references to federal laws, that the orders help to enforce for United States elections.
Proof of Citizenship
The complaints against the EO allege only theoretical harm since EO 14248
has never actually harmed anyone. With merely speculative claims about the future, the plaintiffs cannot truly meet the legal requirements of a cognizable, particularized injury necessary to establish the proper
standing to bring a claim. Nevertheless, Washington, D.C. Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly issued a temporary injunction on two provisions involving
proof of citizenship. Immediately, several media assets reported that a
judge blocked the entire order even though the injunction was temporary
and involved only two of roughly 40 total provisions in the order.
The judicial decision temporarily enjoins the president from ordering
federal agencies to assess citizenship prior to providing the Federal
Voter Registration Form to enrollees of public assistance programs. It
also enjoined the president from ordering the Election Assistance
Commission (EAC), to amend the National Mail Voter Registration form to
include proof of citizenship. Thus, the form can temporarily continue to
be used to register potential voters who attest to being citizens of the
United States whether they are citizens or not.
This decision does not square well with federal law which states: �It
shall be unlawful for any alien to vote in any [federal] election �� 18 U.S.Code � 611(a) and that: �Whoever knowingly makes any false statement
or claim that he is a citizen of the United States in order to register to
vote or to vote in any Federal, State, or local election � Shall be fined
under this title or imprisoned�� 18 U.S. Code � 1015(f).
The executive order simply requires federal agencies to enhance their procedures to enforce federal law pursuant to the president�s
constitutional power. To help justify this rather overreaching decision,
Judge Kollar-Kotelly stated: �As a consequence, the Democratic Party Plaintiffs and the members they represent face nationwide irreparable
harms that this court must remedy.� In other words, Democrats are greatly harmed if they must abide by the law and cannot continue to try and
register individuals who are not qualified to vote.
Accepting Ballots After Election Day
On June 13, Massachusetts U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper, an
Obama appointee, issued a temporary injunction on the same two provisions
and another against ordering the Department of Defense (DOD) to update the Federal Post Card Application with proof of citizenship.
But this judicial decision went even further by temporarily enjoining a
section ordering federal agencies to take steps to prohibit mail-in
ballots from being accepted after Election Day (except for military and overseas voters). This decision enjoins an order to the Department of
Justice to enforce a federal Election Day deadline for accepting ballots.
It also enjoins an order to the EAC to withhold funds from those states
that accept ballots after the Election Day deadline.
Accepting late ballots conflicts with federal law which specifies only one Election Day: �The Tuesday next after the 1st Monday in November, in every
even numbered year, is established as the day for the election�� 2 U.S.
Code � 7. Federal law also provides: �The electors of President and Vice President shall be appointed, in each State, on election day�� 3 U.S. Code
� 1. Presidential and vice-presidential electors cannot be appointed on Election Day if ballots are still being accepted and counted afterwards.
The 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals recently confirmed that Election Day
is, ��the day by which ballots must be both cast by voters and received by state officials,�� RNC v. Wetzel (2024). Nevertheless, the 19 attorneys
general argued that the plaintiff states will be �harmed� by a
�burdensome� effort to enforce existing federal law and Judge Casper
allowed such a hollow, speculative claim to stand. Thus, Judge Casper and
Judge Kollar-Kotelly have overstepped their bounds in attempting to impose their judicial political will on both the executive and legislative
branches of the U.S. Government.
The Judicial Double Standard
Compare these rulings to those from a variety of cases that challenged
various aspects of the 2020 general election.
https://thefederalist.com/2025/07/11/democrats-collude-with-judges-to- keep-allowing-noncitizens-to-vote-in-u-s-elections/
https://floppingaces.net/most-wanted/courts-bless-dems-masterplan-ignore- laws-register-aliens-win-forever/
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