- United States
- Ore.
- Letter
Stop the Ballot Sabotage: A Nonpartisan Call to Action
To: Sen. Wyden, Sen. Merkley, Rep. Salinas
From: A constituent in Sheridan, OR
July 12
I'm writing as a constituent, not as a partisan, because what's happening to our election system right now shouldn't be a partisan issue at all. Over the past several weeks we've watched a coordinated effort to interfere with the machinery of a free and fair election: three of the four commissioners at the Election Assistance Commission — the independent, bipartisan agency Congress created in 2002 specifically to keep federal money and expertise out of political hands — were fired. The Federal Election Commission still lacks a quorum to function. The Commerce Secretary has threatened to withhold delivery of lawful mail-in ballots unless states hand over voter data on the administration's terms. And reports indicate individuals within the Social Security Administration entered a data-sharing arrangement with a partisan advocacy group — a serious breach of the trust citizens place in federal agencies to stay neutral. None of this is about which party wins in November. It's about whether every eligible citizen's vote gets counted at all. Elections in this country have functioned for nearly 250 years on a basic premise: the people choose their government, not the other way around. Undermining the postal service's role in ballot delivery, gutting the agencies meant to secure elections, or quietly sharing sensitive citizen data for political purposes are not policy disagreements — they are attempts to tilt the outcome before a single vote is cast, and to punish states expected to vote a certain way. This should concern you regardless of your party. Authoritarian tactics don't stay confined to one side for long — a system that can be manipulated by one administration can be manipulated by the next. Protecting free and fair elections is the floor beneath every other issue you work on, because none of the rest matters if the public can't trust the outcome. The legal footing for pushback is not ambiguous: *The Elections Clause of the U.S. Constitution (Article I, Section 4) places authority over the times, places, and manner of elections with the states and Congress — not the executive branch. *The Help America Vote Act of 2002 created the EAC as an independent, bipartisan body precisely to insulate election administration from political interference. Gutting its commissioners undermines the statute's core purpose. *The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 and related federal voting-rights statutes protect citizens' access to registration and the ballot from administrative obstruction. *The Privacy Act of 1974 restricts federal agencies from disclosing personal records, including Social Security data, without proper authorization — any partisan data-sharing arrangement raises serious legal exposure. *The U.S. Postal Service has a statutory obligation under 39 U.S.C. § 403 to provide prompt, reliable, and efficient service to the public; using ballot delivery as leverage is a direct threat to that duty and to voters' constitutional rights. I'm asking you to: 1. Publicly oppose any effort — legislative, administrative, or otherwise — to delay, condition, or withhold the delivery of lawful ballots. 2. Demand accountability for the removal of EAC commissioners and the FEC's loss of quorum, and push for their restoration. 3. Investigate any unauthorized data-sharing between federal agencies and partisan organizations. 4. Speak out publicly, not just vote quietly. Constituents need to hear their elected officials name this for what it is, regardless of party. Free and fair elections aren't a Democratic value or a Republican value. They're the foundation everything else is built on. I'm asking you to defend that foundation, plainly and publicly.
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