The Trump administration’s Justice Department announced it will send federal election monitors to 15 jurisdictions in six states during the upcoming 2026 primaries.
Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon addressed the decision in early July, describing the deployment of election monitors as part of the Justice Department’s long-standing efforts to ensure compliance with federal voting laws and protect election integrity.
Thesemonitorswill examine polling place operations, including language access for voters who need it and accommodations for people with disabilities, while also ensuring ineligible votes do not cancel out those of eligible citizens.
Dhillon posted a video on social media announcing that the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division is sending election monitors to jurisdictions in Arizona, Michigan, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, and Virginia.
In recent cycles, the department deployed monitors in nine jurisdictions for the 2022 primaries and 27 for the 2024 general election, with the program expected to expand further ahead of the November 2026 midterms. This type of oversight is nothing new. Federal election monitoring has existed for over a century and remains a long-standing, bipartisan function of the Department of Justice.
The move coincided with nationwide DOJ letters warning election officials of potential criminal liability for knowingly allowing noncitizen voting or failing to maintain accurate voter rolls.
AG Dhillon called the monitoring a standard procedure focused on jurisdictions with recent issues and gave officials five days to respond.
This type of oversight is nothing new.
Federal election oversight has existed for over a century and remains a long-standing, bipartisan function of the Department of Justice, regardless of which administration is in power. For decades, both Republican and Democratic administrations have sent federal monitors to polling places to enforce key laws such as the Voting Rights Act.
The timing aligns with other DOJ actions.
That same day, the department sent letters to election officials in all 50 states and Washington, D.C., warning them of potential criminal liability if they knowingly keep noncitizens on the voter rolls or allow them to vote in our elections.
Dhillon stressed that keeping voter rolls accurate is critical to protecting the core principle that every eligible citizen’s vote counts equally.
Some deployments are drawing particular attention in Michigan, where the DOJ plans to send observers to Detroit, Lansing, and East Lansing ahead of the August 4, 2026 primary.
Letters to local officials cited issues observed during the 2024 election, including shortages of provisional ballots and malfunctioning voting machines in some precincts.
Michigan officials have pushed back strongly. Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey called the allegations “false” and dismissed them as a pretext for extra scrutiny.
Dhillon stated: “Unfortunately, some leaders in Michigan, including the Attorney General and the Governor, have pushed back against this effort. But to be clear, both Republican and Democratic administrations have sent monitors to Michigan and these other jurisdictions in the past.
This is a proper exercise of our oversight and enforcement responsibilities under important federal statutes, including the National Voter Registration Act, the Voting Rights Act, and the Civil Rights Act of 1960.”
This aligns with the DOJ’s broader lawsuits and demands for voter roll data from numerous states, along with a strong emphasis on stopping illegal aliens from voting in our nation’s elections, a top priority for the Trump administration.
Critics on the left view the moves as intimidation or partisan targeting, while most Americans see this as necessary enforcement.
Dhillon has cited past irregularities in places like Detroit and several of the other listed jurisdictions, as a reason for the monitoring.
The monitoring initiative will bring federal oversight to key election jurisdictions across Massachusetts, Minnesota, Arizona, Michigan, New Hampshire, and Virginia.
In follow-up comments (including on the Joe Pags Show), Dhillon named examples such as: Boston (MA), Maricopa County (AZ), Fairfax County (VA), Detroit (MI), Ramsey County (MN), Prince William County (VA), Lansing/East Lansing (MI), Hennepin County (MN), New Bedford (MA), Nashua/Manchester (NH), Apache/Pima Counties (AZ), and Hamtramck (MI).
Many Americans view these deployments as a welcome boost to transparency, strengthening public trust by placing neutral federal observers in high-risk or historically problematic locations.
Drawing on knowledge of past issues in certain jurisdictions, Dhillon put it simply: “The more eyes on elections, in my opinion, the better.” Overall, this added scrutiny aims to safeguard election integrity and reassure Americans that their votes are protected and counted accurately.
As primaries continue and this initiative gains momentum ahead of the general election, these election monitors from the Trump Justice Department are set to become a prominent presence in the 2026 midterms.
This effort aims to deter fraud and irregularities while restoring public trust, even amid partisan debate. While critics on the left decry potential pressure on local officials over voter ID, mail-in ballots, and voter rolls, most taxpaying Americans see it as a long-overdue, commonsense measure to ensure smoother, more secure elections in jurisdictions with documented past issues.