Donald Trump removes final members of independent US election commission 25%

By Al Jazeera Staff64%

7/10/2026, 8:12:22 PM

BS Summary: This article contains 2 faulty reasoning types, including Framing Effect, with Pessimism Bias as the most egregious example at 5.3% saturation with 34 hits. Analysis detected 49 faulty-reasoning hits from 636 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 38.6% and a BS Rank of 25% (10,479 of 13,944 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 75.10% of the article peer group.

President Donald Trump has sought to exercise greater federal control over US elections [Filip Singer/Pool/AFP] 
By Al Jazeera Staff , AP and Reuters 
Published On 10 Jul 2026 10 Jul 2026 
President Donald Trump has removed the last remaining members of an independent federal commission that helps support United States elections, leaving the bipartisan body with no sitting commissioners. 
The White House confirmed the news on Friday, with only months to spare before November’s midterm elections . 
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“The President, and head of the Executive Branch, reserves the right to remove individuals that may not be totally aligned with the important task of securing America’s elections,” the White House said in a statement. 
It added that the administration had been “working across all agencies and local partners to safeguard elections from fraud and abuse” in the run-up to the midterms. 
The decision concerns the Election Assistance Commission (ECA), an independence office created by Congress in 2002 to support state and local election officials. 
Among its duties are creating non-binding election guidelines, certifying voting systems and maintaining the national mail voter registration form. 
Four commissioners typically helm the agency. 
But on Thursday, the two Democratic appointees  Thomas Hicks and Benjamin Hovland  were fired by email, according to the news agency Reuters. 
The lone remaining Republican, Christy McCormick, resigned. 
A fourth commissioner, Republican appointee Donald Palmer, had already left in April. 
The commission is required by law to be made up evenly of Democrats and Republicans, and it was put in place to help after the disputed 2000 presidential election. 
Trump’s decision to fire the remaining commissioners has further raised concerns that he may seek to intervene in the upcoming midterm elections, which will decide control of Congress for the rest of his term. 
Under the US Constitution, election administration is the responsibility of the state, not the federal government. 
The Election Assistance Commission had previously declined to implement part of Trump’s March 2025 executive order that called upon it to require proof of citizenship on the national mail voter registration form. 
A federal judge later blocked that part of that executive order, ruling the president had exceeded his authority. 
Trump has appealed the ruling. 
Voters are already required to affirm their citizenship before voting, as non-citizen voting is illegal in the US. 
Instances of non-citizen voting are rare. 
The firings are the latest in a broader effort by the president to reshape how elections are conducted. 
The Trump administration has pushed to tighten vote-by-mail rules and threatened to withhold some federal funding from states that refuse to adopt new election requirements. 
Many of those efforts have been challenged in court. 
Earlier this week, the administration also sent out letters warning election officials that they could face prosecution if they fail to remove noncitizens from voter rolls. 
Trump has defended the actions as necessary to protect election integrity. 
He has repeatedly claimed that his loss to Democrat Joe Biden in the 2020 election was the result of fraud, a claim not backed by evidence. 
The latest firings come after the US Supreme Court last month expanded the president’s power to fire members of independent agencies, even without cause. 
The court ruled six to three in Trump’s favour, arguing that “neither Congress nor the courts may saddle” the president with executive-branch leaders he does not approve of. 
The president is allowed by law to appoint replacements to the commission. 
It is not yet clear whether Trump plans to nominate replacements or leave the seats vacant. 
Confirmation Bias
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Anchoring Bias
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Availability Heuristic
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Representativeness Heuristic
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Hindsight Bias
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Overconfidence Bias
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Framing Effect
2.4%
Loss Aversion
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Status Quo Bias
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Sunk Cost Effect
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Optimism Bias
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Pessimism Bias
5.3%
Negativity Bias
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Self-Serving Bias
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Fundamental Attribution Error
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Actor-Observer Bias
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In-Group Bias
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Out-Group Homogeneity Bias
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Halo Effect
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Horn Effect
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Dunning-Kruger Effect
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Recency Bias
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Primacy Effect
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Blind-Spot Bias
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Ad Hominem
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Straw Man
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Appeal to Authority
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False Dilemma
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Slippery Slope
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Circular Reasoning
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Hasty Generalization
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Red Herring
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Bandwagon
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Appeal to Emotion
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Begging the Question
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Post Hoc (False Cause)
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Tu Quoque
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Burden of Proof
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Appeal to Nature
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Composition/Division
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Anecdotal
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No True Scotsman
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Ambiguity (Equivocation)
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Gambler’s Fallacy
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Middle Ground
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Personal Incredulity
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Special Pleading
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Genetic Fallacy
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Unattributed Quote
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Quote-first Misdirection
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Biased Writer Voice
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Indoctrination
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Politically Left Leaning Bias
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Politically Right Leaning Bias
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Attempt to Sell a Product or Service
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636 words analyzed.

Voice attribution · Experimental

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1speaker9.7%attributed speech574writer words
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Selected voice

White House

0%flagged-word coverage
62 attributed words100% of attributed speech8.5% writer coverage

No manipulation-pattern hits were found in this speaker's attributed words or the writer's voice.

Attribution is sentence-level. Pattern percentages are calculated only from words assigned to that voice.

Analysis

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