This is an adapted excerpt from the Oct. 27 episode of “The Beat with Ari Melber.”
Last week, the Justice Department announced it would deploy election monitors to polling sites in two Democratic-led states, California and New Jersey, ahead of the Nov. 4 elections. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the move would “ensure the American people get the fair, free, and transparent elections they deserve.”
Earlier this month, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, whose state has become one of President Donald Trump’s prime targets, warned that the president would take this move and cautioned that he could use it to interfere. “I think it’s not very far away from him offering and providing the military to protect the polling places across America, but particularly in blue states and blue cities, with the idea that they could confiscate the ballot boxes if they think there is fraud in the election,” he told Politico.
Now, the federal government has the power to send out election monitors, but it does not have the power to confiscate ballot boxes in state-run elections simply because it may not like the results. However, we have seen this administration repeatedly do things it does not have the power to do.
A federal court found that Trump violated the Posse Comitatus Act, which bars the military from assisting in civilian law enforcement unless authorized by Congress, when he sent National Guard troops into Los Angeles. Despite that, the president still pushed ahead and deployed troops to other Democratic-run cities.








