Donald Trump has made Shocking Statement, Check This out

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  president trump addressing public

President Trump promised Monday to work to end mail-in voting and said work is already underway on an executive order to ban it before the 2026 midterm elections, although the Constitution does not give him this power.

"We, as a Republican Party, are going to do everything possible that we get rid of  " mail n ballot" he said during an Oval Office meeting with Ukraine president, Zelenskyy  "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."

Pm Trump Welcoming  Ukraine president, Zelenskyy

What Did Trump Say?

On August 18, 2025, former President Donald Trump declared his intent to ban mail-in voting and voting machines before the November 3, 2026 midterm elections. He said he’ll sign an executive order to "bring honesty" to the election process, calling mail-in ballots “fraud,” “inaccurate,” expensive, and incompatible with transparent elections. He also painted state officials as mere "agents" of the federal government who must comply with presidential directives.

Trump repeated a false claim that the U.S. is the only country using mail-in voting—though international data shows at least 34 countries, including Canada, the UK, Germany, and Australia, employ postal ballots.


 Reference photo of Trump,Zelenskyy and Putin

Can He Actually Do That?

No. Legal scholars and courts have already ruled that the president does not have unilateral authority to ban mail-in voting or phase out voting machines. Election laws and administration are constitutionally under state jurisdiction, though Congress does have some regulatory power. Previous attempts—including a March executive order—were blocked by federal courts.

Legal experts labeled Trump’s framing—that states are mere “agents” answerable to the federal executive—as authoritarian fiction, outside the bounds of constitutional governance.

How Are Others Responding?

  • Civil rights organizations, including the ACLU, warned that eliminating mail-in voting would disenfranchise vulnerable groups—such as the elderly, people with disabilities, and those without easy access to polling places.
  • Election officials affirmed that the mail-in system is highly secure—with tracking barcodes, verifications, and established safeguards—and have called banning it a recipe for chaos.
  • Democrats sharply criticized Trump’s plan. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer likened the effort to a return to Jim Crow–era voter suppression, and Democratic governors and election officials pledged to resist.

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