
House Democrats grapple with Trump’s threats to U.S. elections: “This is a five-alarm fire”
CNBC
President Donald Trump recently called to "nationalize" federal elections, ban mail voting and impose voter-ID requirements ahead of the 2026 midterms.
House Democrats this week laid out their plans to counter President Donald Trump's rhetoric about "nationalizing" this year's elections ahead of the 2026 midterms.
The lawmakers convened at their annual policy retreat, where they set their agenda for the year and hone campaign messaging. They met in northern Virginia this week following Trump's escalating calls for voter-ID requirements at the polls and his desire to require presenting documents to register to vote, both changes that would likely disenfranchise voters across the U.S. A pending Supreme Court decision on the Voting Rights Act also looms large, and Trump has said he is considering ways of imposing the changes he wants even if Congress does not pass legislation.
"This is a five alarm fire," Rep. Terri Sewell, D-Ala., said at a Congressional Black Caucus press conference at the retreat's close on Friday. "We are going to fight back, and we are going to use every tool in the toolkit."













