Trump Is Still Obsessed with Stealing ElectionsThe FBI’s seizure of Georgia ballots is as much about future elections as past ones.Operation Sorry About All That is now well underway in Minnesota’s Twin Cities, where White House border czar Tom Homan has replaced Border Patrol cartoon villain Greg Bovino as the point man overseeing ICE’s ongoing enforcement. As we were preparing to send this newsletter this morning, Homan headed to a press podium for his first public remarks since taking the command. He struck a conciliatory tone in his remarks, speaking of productive meetings with state and local leaders, acknowledging in vague terms that federal officers had made mistakes during the operation, insisting that officers would face accountability for misconduct, and emphasizing that ICE’s focus going forward would be targeted enforcement, not broad sweeps. Still, Homan emphasized that Trump’s deportation mission remained ongoing and that aggressive street protests were a barrier to deescalation. We’ll have much more on all this tomorrow. Raiders of the Lost Causeby Andrew Egger For Donald Trump, the 2020 election still isn’t over. Yesterday, FBI agents executed a warrant at an election office and archive in Fulton County, Georgia. They were seeking, the Fulton County government said, “a number of records related to 2020 elections,” including computers and ballots. Agents ended up carting off more than 700 boxes. Back in Washington, Trump was watching from afar. He spent the evening retweeting lunatic conspiracy theories about Georgia’s 2020 election, which ultimately broke for Joe Biden by only about 12,000 votes. According to posts he reshared, Fulton County election workers had spent election night “pulling suitcases full of alleged fraudulent ballots from under tables after the election center was shut down, running the same stack of ballots over, and over, and over, all throughout the night until Biden was ahead, stealing the election from President Trump.” “TRUMP WON BIG,” Trump himself wrote in response. “Crooked election!” Although it feels insane to have to write this in 2026, I guess I probably should: All Trump’s claims about the supposed mendacity of the 2020 election have been endlessly litigated and relitigated. The votes have been counted, recounted, investigated, and audited. Every investigation into the matter has confirmed the same thing: Trump’s claims were preposterous lies in 2020, and they remain just as preposterously untrue six years on. There’s one thing that’s new, though. It’s possible that now, unlike in 2020, we no longer live in a world where the actual truth or falsehood of such claims actually matters. That’s the remarkable statement Fulton County Commissioner Mo Ivory made to reporters last night. “We know in America right now it does not even matter if what you are saying is the right thing,” Ivory said. “If our president wants to bring in the forces, he will.” Trump’s assault on our elections—once unambiguously his most outrageous crime—can now only rarely recapture our attention amid so many other scandals and disasters. It has somehow become, for us, a background matter. When Trump, speaking for America on the world stage at Davos, proclaims that 2020 “was a rigged election” and promises that “people will soon be prosecuted for what they did,” we’re almost too numb to be scandalized. When he commemorates the fifth anniversary of the January 6th insurrection by publishing a website recasting rioters as peaceful patriots and police as violent instigators, or when he hangs a plaque in the White House claiming that Joe Biden took office “as a result of the most corrupt Election ever seen in the United States,” we find it difficult to summon the appropriate spirit of outrage. Well, it’s time to wake up. Trump remains hellbent on punishing the people he somehow still believes stole an election from him once upon a time. And he seems keen on intimidating election officials—and influencing the vote—in states that will decide the congressional margins in 2026 and the presidential outcome in 2028. And the fact that he now has the FBI participating in his revenge effort is a terrifying demonstration of just how many guardrails he has steamrolled—or that have fallen away—since that election. Trump wanted the Justice Department to seize voting infrastructure after the 2020 election, too. At the time, Attorney General William Barr refused the request, citing, as Barr testified later, a lack of probable cause. The idea that Attorney General Pam Bondi or FBI Director Kash Patel would ever display the moral fiber to raise similar objections was always laughable. As of yesterday, it is disproven. It would be one thing if Trump’s campaign against the 2020 election were about vengeance only. That would be despicable, but it’s not obvious it would work. After all, as Trump keeps learning to his fury, really getting retribution on any of these people requires a certain amount of cooperation from judges and juries, which he has so far failed utterly to get. But Trump has plenty of reasons to care about the 2026 and 2028 elections too. As I wrote earlier this month, his attempt to relitigate 2020
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