Trump fires EAC members right before the 2026 Midterm Elections, a decision that has triggered immediate panic across the country. By removing the remaining leadership of the Trump Election Assistance Commission, the administration is aggressively expanding executive power over local voting systems, completely dictating how the country will run its next vote.
What is the Election Assistance?
To understand why this is a big issue, you have to look at what the Election Assistance Commission is and why Congress built it in the first place. Created under the Help America Vote Act of 2002, the EAC acts as the nation’s bipartisan clearinghouse for election administration. It certifies voting machines, works with local officials to block hacking attempts, and manages national mail-in registration forms. By law, the commission must maintain an even two-Democrat, two-Republican split to prevent political bias.
That bipartisan guardrail is now officially gone. The White House forced out the final three Senate-confirmed commissioners, Thomas Hicks, Benjamin Hovland, and Christy McCormick—leaving the entire agency completely empty. While the sole Republican appointee resigned, the two Democratic commissioners received their walking papers via a blunt email from the Presidential Personnel Office.

The timing of this purge is not an accident. The sweeping move comes at a moment when the administration is pushing heavily for federal control over mail-in ballots and voting rules, areas that the U.S. Constitution traditionally leaves to individual states.
The administration is moving forward with total confidence due to a structural shift in Washington. This clear-out relies heavily on a recent Supreme Court independent agency removal power decision. This ruling gives the president sweeping constitutional authority to fire leaders of independent regulatory boards who do not fall in line with executive branch goals. A White House official openly confirmed this strategy, stating the administration reserves the right to remove any official who is “not totally aligned” with their plans to reshape election infrastructure.
EAC Commissioners Fired Midterms
Leaving the nation’s core election administration agency completely rudderless just months before a major national vote has set off panic. Election experts are pointing out the severe risks of having EAC commissioners fired as midterm preparations are peaking.
Democratic Senator Mark Warner of Virginia fiercely condemned the purge on social media, calling it an extraordinary step that raises profound concerns about direct political interference. Without a functioning quorum of commissioners, the EAC cannot formally vote to certify new voting system standards or issue official, bipartisan security guidance to state poll workers. This administrative paralysis leaves local town clerks and state election directors completely on their own to defend against cybersecurity threats and foreign interference.
My Opinion
Firing the entire leadership of a bipartisan election oversight agency right before a critical national election is the behavior of an authoritarian, not a leader respecting democratic institutions.
The administration’s excuse that these experts were not “aligned” with the executive branch is terrifying. The Election Assistance Commission was specifically built by Congress under the Help America Vote Act to be independent and bipartisan. It is supposed to be insulated from White House political pressure. Weaponizing a favorable Supreme Court independent agency removal power ruling to purge independent watchdogs is a deliberate attempt to build an electoral system where the ruling party acts as both the player and the referee. If Americans allow the executive branch to fire the very people who certify our voting machines simply because they won’t pledge personal loyalty, then they are looking at the death of independent elections in America.
Bottom Line
The sudden vacuum at the top of the nation’s premier voting oversight body leaves the future of American election security completely up in the air. While the administration insists it will work with local partners to fight fraud during the 2026 Midterm Elections, it has provided no timeline for appointing new, bipartisan replacements to the empty board. Firing the election commission is definitely a bad decision.





