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The Democrats have urged the U.S. court to block President Donald Trump’s executive order from overhauling the electoral system, and believe the change has the potential to deny the right to vote for qualified U.S. citizens.
The Democratic National Committee said in a lawsuit against the Trump administration filed in a federal court in Washington, D.C. that Trump exceeded his authority in the March 25 order, requiring voters to prove they are U.S. citizens to prevent states from receiving mail-in ballots on election day and threatening to take federal funds away from states that do not comply.
According to a lawsuit filed by long-time democratic election lawyer Marc Elias and other lawyers at other companies, the executive order aims to implement fundamental changes in how Americans register to vote, vote, and participate in our democratic system, all of which threaten to deprive legitimate voters of lawfulness without legitimate voters.
According to the gathering, U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer and U.S. Representative Hakeem Jeffries, U.S. Senate Democratic minority and House leaders are also plaintiffs in the case.
The Trump administration has previously argued that the order would prevent foreign nationals from interfering in the U.S. election.
Trump has long questioned the U.S. election system and continues to claim that his 2020 loss to Democratic President Joe Biden was the result of widespread fraud.
The president and his Republican allies also claim that a widespread vote by non-citizens is illegal and rarely happens.
Democrats said in the lawsuit that the U.S. Constitution gives individuals the power of the state and Congress, not the president, to control how federal elections are conducted.
“The makers of our federal constitution foresee that selfish leaders may seek to undermine our democratic system of government in order to expand and safeguard their own power,” the lawsuit reads.
In addition, voting rights groups including the Campaign Law Center and the State Defender Fund pose separate legal challenges to executive orders.