Roll Call - The White House has abruptly altered course on President Donald
Trump’s vow to have an elite legal team craft an executive order that
would end mail-in voting, with a top aide saying the administration
would instead forge a legislative path.
Trump has railed against the practice most of his political career,
ramping up his lambasting of the practice during and after his
unsuccessful 2020 reelection bid. He began the week with an early
morning vow to, as he wrote Monday in a 7:17 a.m. social media post, “lead a movement to get rid of MAIL-IN S.”...
Trump was asked about his effort to end mail-in voting and rid the
election process of the voting machines later Monday during a media
availability in the Oval Office. “We’re going to start with an executive order that’s being written
right now by the best lawyers in the country to end mail-in ballots
because they’re corrupt,” he told reporters.
But White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday, just
over 24 hours later, signaled that the administration had ditched the
president’s approach.
“The White House continues to work on this, and when Congress comes
back to Washington I’m sure there will be many discussions with our
friends on Capitol Hill, and also our friends in state legislatures
across the country, to ensure that we’re protecting the integrity of the
vote for the American people,” she said. “And I think Republicans
generally and the president generally wants to make it easier for
Americans to vote and harder for people to cheat in our elections.”
Asked what changed so quickly, and whether Trump had received a legal
ruling from within the administration that his office lacked the
authority to make such a dramatic election change, a White House
spokesman merely lobbed accusations at Democrats and repeated Trump’s
2024 campaign platform on the issue.