US politics live with Shrai Popat Maine
Trump justice department threatens criminal charges against state election officials unless they provide voter rolls – as it happened
This live blog is now closed.
Sign up for the Breaking News US email
Robert Mackey , Lucy Campbell , Shannon Ho , Rachel Leingang and Tom Ambrose
Fri 10 Jul 2026 21.59 EDT First published on Fri 10 Jul 2026 06.40 EDT
Democratic super PAC runs ad attacking Sunrise Movement founder Will Lawrence for having a small 401(k)
Trump-appointed judge reluctantly dismisses seditious conspiracy case against Proud Boys
House Democrats pledge 'to find the truth about Lorenzo Salgado Araujo's death', father of 3 shot and killed by ICE
Trump justice department threatens criminal charges against state election officials unless they provide list of voters
Maine secretary of state's office confirms it received Platner's letter, ending his candidacy for US Senate
Graham Platner posts letter formally withdrawing from Maine Senate race
House Democrats accuse Trump of misusing disaster response agency for immigration crackdown
Trump administration issues fresh Iran-related sanctions
White House upgrading front door to fortify entrance - report
Trump to allow housing bill to become law - report
Crews are draining the DC reflecting pool – again – amid Trump's troubled revamp
Trump ousts members of key election commission: what we know so far
Senators reach deal with Trump on Russia sanctions bill
Trump says he has 'left instructions' to bomb Iran if it were to assassinate him
Judge to decide if Charlie Kirk case will go to murder trial after five-day hearing
Trump says he won't sign major bipartisan housing bill 'in protest' over failure to pass Save Act
Trump claims Iran has asked to continue talks and US agreed - but insists ceasefire is over
Trump administration plans to fence Pennsylvania Avenue outside White House - report
Democratic election officials are concerned but ready to administer elections
What does happens to the election commission after Trump's firings?
'Brazen attempt to seize control': Democratic leader vows to fight Trump's election commission firings
Man killed by ICE agents not intended target of immigration arrest, DHS says
Trump called 'irresponsible and dangerous' over election commission firings
Voters fill out ballots during Maryland’s primary election on 23 June.
Photograph: Brian Krista/TNS/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
After a federal judge dismissed a Department of Justice lawsuit seeking to compel Maryland to provide the federal government with an electronic copy of its statewide voter registration list, as the Trump administration attempts to assert control of state-run elections, Maryland’s top election official was threatened this week with criminal prosecution in a letter from Harmeet Dhillon , the assistant attorney general for the justice department’s civil rights division.
The state’s elections administrator, Jared DeMarinis , described it to Maryland Matters , a nonprofit news site, as “a nice love letter from the Department of Justice threatening my arrest.”
“It is just unconscionable to threaten and try to intimidate election officials, not just in Maryland, but throughout the United States,” DeMarinis added.
“After losing in court,” Maryland senator Chris Van Hollen wrote on social media with a link to the Maryland Matters report, the Trump administration “is now threatening election officials in Maryland and across the country to get access to voter rolls.
This is yet another outrageous attempt to sow doubt in our democracy & intimidate states.
We must hold the line.”
Dhillon told Real America’s Voice , a far-right network created to host Steve Bannon ’s podcast, that she sent similar letters, threatening “potential criminal penalties” for “knowingly retaining noncitizens” on registered voter lists, to election officials in every US state this week.
Speaking to the pro-Trump host John Solomon , Dhillon mocked the “hyperventilating” response to her letter from Utah’s Republican lieutenant governor, Deidre Henderson .
Henderson, who has also pushed back on the administration’s attempt to have the US Post Office refuse to deliver mail ballots in states that do not submit lists of approved voters to the federal government, wrote on social media :
Got another love letter this morning from the DOJ sprinkled throughout with threats of criminal prosecution.
I’m sure I’m not the only chief election officer of a state who is being targeted for following state and federal laws by resisting DOJ’s demands for private voter data that have thus far been ruled illegal by at least a dozen courts.
This is truly bizarre behavior by the federal agency that is supposed to be protecting civil rights.
Washington’s Democratic secretary of state, Steve Hobbs , accused the Department of Justice of “accelerating down a slippery slope” by issuing criminal threats to him and other state officials who are empowered to administer elections by the US constitution’s elections clause .
“Attempts to revive disproven claims of rigged elections will not deter election professionals from doing their job of overseeing accessible, accurate, auditable elections,” Hobbs said in a statement after receiving his letter from Dhillon.
Although Donald Trump signed an executive order early in his second term attempting to take control of major parts of the nation’s election systems, courts have ruled that the US president has no constitutional authority over federal election administration.
The nonprofit news site Votebeat reported earlier this week that although officials in all 50 states received the letter, “many did not immediately realize it; in several states, the Justice Department sent the letter to the generic email addresses listed on agency websites for use by the public.”
Rick Hasen , an election law professor at UCLA, told Votebeat, the letters are “in line with the Trump administration’s efforts to push the myth of mass noncitizen voting and to threaten and intimidate state and local election officials”.
This concludes our live coverage of the second Trump administration for the day.
Here are the latest developments:
Graham Platner posted a copy of a letter on social media which said: “I write to formally withdraw my candidacy for United States Senate.”
The Maine secretary of state’s office confirmed that it had received the same letter, ending his candidacy for the US Senate.
The Department of Justice sent letters to election officials in all 50 states threatening them with criminal charges if they do not turn over lists of registered voters, despite a court dismissing the administration’s lawsuit seeking the lists.
In a letter sent to the homeland security secretary Markwayne Mullin on Friday, House Democrats said that they “are investigating the fatal shooting of Mr.
Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, as well as the Trump administration’s response to his killing.”
A federal judge nominated by Donald Trump during his first term reluctantly agreed to dismiss the seditious conspiracy case against leaders of the Proud Boys who were convicted by a jury of serious crimes during the attack on the US Capitol by Trump supporters on January 6 2021.
The Crush Maga PAC, a Democratic super PAC, diverted resources from its main target in Michigan’s seventh congressional district, the incumbent Republican congressman Tom Barrett , to run an attack ad against one of his progressive challengers, Will Lawrence , a cofounder of the Sunrise Movement.
The Crush Maga PAC, a Democratic super PAC, diverted resources this week from its main target in Michigan’s seventh congressional district, the incumbent Republican congressman Tom Barrett , to run an attack ad against one of his progressive challengers, Will Lawrence , a cofounder of the Sunrise Movement.
As the American Prospect editor David Dayen reports , the anti-Lawrence ad, which has been served to YouTube users in the district around Lansing, Michigan, badly distorts the facts by attacking the climate activist for having “invested thousands in Wall Street, big oil and data centers”.
As Lawrence himself explained in a video response , this is a wildly misleading way of referring to the fact that he has “a 401(k) invested in a mutual fund” worth just $11,000.
The ad also accuses Lawrence of hypocrisy for saying he opposes dark money in politics but “spent years running a dark money organization himself”, without explaining that the group was the Sunrise Movement, which battles to stop the climate crisis.
Finally, the attack ad also hits Lawrence for being part of the Uncommitted movement in Michigan, which urged voters to not support then president Joe Biden in the 2024 Democratic primary there, in response to his support for Israel’s assault on Gaza.
Lawrence makes no apology for pushing the Democratic president on Palestinian rights, but he said on a podcast just before the 2024 election that he had voted for Kamala Harris , as the “lesser evil” than Donald Trump , even though “it really, really made me sick.”
Lawrence responded on social media to reporting from Dayen that the Democratic super PAC that ran the ad had previously received $100,000 from United Democracy Project, the biggest super PAC affiliated with American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC.
“$500,000 on an ad targeting my $11,000 401K,” Lawrence wrote .
“The ‘thousands’ they are talking about is a mutual fund and my only retirement savings.
More ridiculous smears from AIPAC-linked PACs that are afraid of candidates like me who will stand up to corporate power and the war-lobby.”
A recent poll of the Democratic primary, commissioned by Lawrence’s campaign, showed him leading two other Democrats with establishment support: the former US ambassador to Ukraine, Bridget Brink, and a retired Navy SEAL, Matt Maasdam.
A federal judge nominated by Donald Trump during his first term reluctantly agreed on Friday to grant the Department of Justice’s motion to dismiss the seditious conspiracy case against leaders of the Proud Boys who were convicted by a jury of serious crimes during the attack on the US Capitol by Trump supporters on January 6 2021.
Judge Timothy Kelly noted in a seven-page memorandum that the Proud Boy leaders Ethan Nordean , Joseph Biggs and Zachary Rehl were all convicted of multiple crimes, including seditious conspiracy, and a fourth member of the group, Dominic Pezzola , was convicted of assaulting an officer and also “breaking a Capitol window, thereby helping to create the first entry point through which hundreds of rioters streamed into the building.”
Pezzola’s destruction of the window was recorded in a social media video that quickly became one of the iconic images of the day.
Kelly went on to note that he was granting the motion to dismiss the prosecutions even though the request was clearly based not on facts or the law but on Trump’s desire to excuse the violence of his supporters.
“[T]here is little mystery about why the Government is moving to dismiss this case, or whether dismissal is in fact what the Executive seeks,” Kelly observed.
“President Trump’s views about the prosecution of those who attacked the U.S.
Capitol on January 6—whether those views are based on fact or fiction—are well known, as is his intention to extend clemency to them”.
Kelly also noted that the case was initiated “while President Trump was still in power” in the days after the attack.
“As the Court has said many times, the attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021 was a perilous event,” Kelly wrote.
“It was an attack on people, including police officers, many of whom were injured.
It was an attack on a coordinate branch of government—Congress—that the Founders saw fit to give a place of primacy in Article I of the Constitution.
And it was an attack on the Constitution’s mechanism to facilitate the peaceful transfer of power from one president to the next, what President Reagan called ‘nothing less than a miracle.’”
“Moving forward, if this Nation’s experiment in self-government is to last another 250 years, the American people—no matter their partisan preferences—will have to act together to preserve, protect and defend that miracle through our constitutional framework,” the Trump-appointed judge concluded.
On Tuesday morning, while Salgado, his brother and two men were heading to work in Houston, Texas he was shot and killed during a “targeted enforcement operation” by ICE officials.
As our colleague José Olivares reported , Hugo Balderas-Ibarra , a Texas attorney representing two of the men in the van, said during a press conference on Friday his clients “reiterated that at no point was there ever an agent standing in front of the vehicle, nor was an agent ever placed in the line of danger”.
The letter to Mullin, signed by a dozen Democrats, noted that “the Trump administration and DHS have used excessive and deadly force in the recent past, to include the tragic, unlawful shootings of American citizens Renee Good, Alex Pretti, and Marimar Martinez, and issued false and misleading statements in an attempt to justify those shootings.”
“Indeed, witnesses to the shooting of Mr.
Salgado Araujo paint a different picture than DHS’s claims,” the lawmakers continue.
“ICE has allegedly encouraged these witnesses, Mr.
Salgado Araujo’s brother and two of their co-workers, to sign paperwork for self-deportation from the United States.,” the letter adds.
“This is incredibly concerning, as these men would be critical to any investigation into the fatal shooting.”
The letter goes on to demand that the department “immediately turn over” all evidence of what happened.
“In addition to our demand for immediate records production, this letter serves as notice of an ongoing congressional investigation and that you are to preserve, in accordance with all applicable Federal laws, all records relating to the use of deadly force by DHS law enforcement during any immigration enforcement operation, as well as any future incidents in which deadly force is used,” the Democrats told Mullin.
One of the lawmakers, Seth Magaziner of Rhode Island, pledged “to find the truth” about the killing.
“He wasn’t the person they were looking for.
ICE statements don’t match witness accounts.
Now they’re pressuring witnesses to self-deport,” Magaziner wrote.
A spokesperson for the Republican National Committee once again described Graham Platner as a “rapist” in a statement sent to reporters after the Maine Democrat formally ended his US Senate campaign, treating an allegation that he raped a former romantic partner, which he has denied, as a fact.
“Republicans have been sounding the alarm about Graham Platner for months and today he exited the race without taking any accountability,” RNC spokesperson Kristen Cianci said in the statement emailed to the Guardian.
“Instead, he declared himself kingmaker and his successor the carrier of his legacy – too bad his legacy is one of a sick Nazi rapist.”
The Republican party spokesperson’s certainty that the allegation Platner calls “false” is true contrasts with the doubt expressed earlier this week by her party’s president, Donald Trump .
“It’s really a question of whether or not you believe the woman,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Wednesday when asked about the allegation against Platner.
“A lot of people say big falsehoods,” said the Republican president who was found liable by a jury of sexually abusing the writer E Jean Carroll in the 1990s, and then sued ABC News for reporting that he had been found “liable for rape”.
In a 2023 court order denying Trump’s motion to overturn a $2m jury award of compensatory damages , a federal judge, Lewis Kaplan , wrote that while the jury did not find that Trump had raped her “within the narrow, technical meaning of a particular section of the New York Penal Law”, which “applies only to vaginal penetration by a penis”, it did find that Trump had subjected Carroll to “[f]orcible, unconsented-to penetration of the vagina or of other bodily orifices by fingers, other body parts, or other articles”.
“The finding that Ms.
Carroll failed to prove that she was ‘raped’ within the meaning of the New York Penal Law does not mean that she failed to prove that Mr.
Trump ‘raped’ her as many people commonly understand the word ‘rape,’” the judge added.
“Indeed, as the evidence at trial recounted below makes clear, the jury found that Mr.
Trump in fact did exactly that.”
The Democratic senator John Fetterman, who has faced mounting political challenges, is joining forces with the Republican senator Dave McCormick to launch a new joint fundraising committee, a move that is likely to fuel additional questions about Fetterman’s increasingly rightward lurch.
Pennsylvania ’s two US senators have established a shared fundraising committee that will collect donations benefiting both of their campaigns in an unusual bipartisan arrangement.
Federal Election Commission records filed on Monday show the creation of Common Ground PA.
The filing identifies the leadership Pacs and principal campaign committees for both Fetterman and McCormick as participants in the joint committee.
Politico first reported the formation of the fundraising committee this week.
The move led to fresh speculation that Fetterman might be planning a party switch.
Rick Wilson, the longtime political consultant and anti-Trump activist, predicted “He’s gonna flip” in a social media post in response to the new fundraising committee.
Nick Field, a local politics writer in Pennsylvania, wrote : “Fetterman caucusing with the Republicans in 2027, and even trying to run in 2028 with their support, looks likelier and likelier by the day.”
John Fetterman joins forces with Republican counterpart in Senate for fundraising committee
The Maine secretary of state’s office issued a statement on Friday confirming that “a formal notice has been received from U.S.
Senate candidate Graham Platner” making his withdrawal from the race official.
The office was careful to point out that Platner had not formally withdrawn by simply posting his letter on social media earlier, but said that he is now no longer a candidate, setting off a rush to replace him on the November ballot.
One of the declared candidates is Maine’s current secretary of state, Shenna Bellows .
“A public declaration is not an official withdrawal, and a candidate must formally withdraw in writing to the Elections office, including signature,” the office explained.
The statement continued:
Because the candidate officially withdrew before 5 p.m. of the 2 nd Monday in July (July 13, 2026), his name will not appear on the ballot, and his political party may replace him.
The deadline for the party to name a replacement is the 4 th Monday in July (July 27, 2026).
Maine Statute does not address how a replacement candidate may be chosen by a party, only that the candidate filling the vacancy must be a ‘qualified person.’
Announcements about how a replacement candidate will be chosen or when that candidate will be announced will come from the political party.
Graham Platner just posted a copy of a letter on social media which says: “I write to formally withdraw my candidacy for United States Senate.”
The rest of the letter which is signed by the candidate who was accused of sexual assault, reads:
On June 9th, 156,084 Mainers voted for a new kind of politics.
One that is representative of people down here in the real world - not billionaires, oligarchs, or the political establishment.
Mainers voted for Medicare for All; to ban billionaires from buying elections; and for an end to taxpayer-funded genocide and forever wars.
They voted for time and dignity; for strong unions and jobs they can raise families on; for the hope of buying a home; for the chance to retire with grace.
People are desperate for change.
For this broken system to be righted.
For the American experiment to be furthered.
Over the past eleven months, thousands and thousands of Mainers poured their hearts, time, and talent into a movement to deliver that vision.
I will be forever grateful to them.
And in submitting this letter today, I seek to further the movement we have built together and the future we believe in.
My name may have been on the ballot, but that ballot line belongs to the people of Maine.
As such, please consider this notice as my official withdrawal from consideration for this office.
F*ck ICE.
Free Palestine.
Up the Hearts.
Although Platner’s letter was addressed “To Whom It May Concern”, the Maine secretary of state’s office confirmed to the Associated Press that it had received the letter on Friday, making the withdrawal official.
Congressional Democrats released an investigative report on Friday that accuses the Trump administration of misusing the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), by diverting staff and resources away from disaster response to support immigration enforcement operations.
The report found that the administration used Fema staff to support the work of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operations by carrying out administrative duties, like hiring new immigration officers, and working at detention centers.
Among the key findings of the investigation, Democrats said , was that Department of Homeland Security leadership “relied on FEMA to serve as the backbone of large-scale immigration enforcement and detention operations and that FEMA’s delayed response to the Texas flooding resulted in demonstrable harm to disaster survivors.”
“After the Trump administration hollowed out a third of FEMA’s workforce, it put disaster professionals to work as the ‘operational backbone’ of its cruel mass deportation agenda, likely in violation of federal law,” Greg Stanton, an Arizona congressman who directed the investigation, said of the report’s findings.
“We’re in the middle of a dangerous and destructive hurricane and wildfire season.
The stakes couldn’t be higher,” Stanton added.
“Every FEMA employee detailed to ICE and CBP should be recalled immediately, and Congress must put real penalties in the law so no future administration can raid this life-saving agency again.”
“While communities across the country are struggling to prepare for more severe and frequent natural disasters, the Trump administration is using FEMA employees and funding for its large-scale, brutal immigration enforcement operations,” Rick Larsen, a Washington congressman who is the senior Democrat on a House subcommittee on emergency management, added.
We also have new pictures coming through of the the giant new helipad that Donald Trump confirmed a few days ago is being built on the White House South Lawn.
The granite helipad will accommodate the presidential helicopter Marine One and is being paid for by a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin.
Workers building the helipad on the South Lawn of the White House on Friday.
Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday:
We’re building a helipad, a beautiful helipad, and it’s got the seal of the White House on it, in granite, in carved granite.
It’s really a beautiful thing.
He added that Sikorsky Aircraft would pay for the project.
“It’s about $5 or $6m.
They’re paying the full cost,” he said.
The United States has issued new Iran -related sanctions following Iran’s resumption of attacks on international shipping in the strait of Hormuz , the treasury department said today.
The latest sanctions target Iranian financial facilitator Ali Ansari, who the treasury department described as a “key financier” who “oversees a sprawling global network of assets benefitting Iran’s leader – Mojtaba Khamenei – and other regime elites.”
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) also targeted key Iranian exchange houses that it said moved billions of dollars annually on behalf of sanctioned Iranian banks, using layers of shell companies to obscure the government’s illicit financial activity.
Earlier today, Donald Trump once again declared that the US-Iran memorandum of understanding is “over”, before adding that talks with Tehran would continue.
The White House is making security-focused upgrades to its front door, CNN reports citing an official , in a project that is expected to take several months.
The changes, which CNN’s sources said have long been advocated by the Secret Service, are aimed at fortifying the White House entrance at the north portico, which has recently been obscured by scaffolding and a tarp as workers repair the exterior columns at Donald Trump ’s request.
The North Portico fortifications are expected to be complete by approximately mid-September, the White House official told CNN.
A tarp covers scaffolding on the north portico of the White House on Friday.
Photograph: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP
It comes amid a heightened focus on boosting presidential security after Trump has been the target of multiple assassination attempts, including April’s shocking shooting at the White House correspondents’ dinner and an alleged plot to attack last month’s UFC fight on the White House South Lawn.
Earlier, we brought you the Washington Post’s report that the Trump administration plans to erect new permanent fences outside the White House, in addition to previously reported plans to build new permanent fencing around Lafayette Square, the public park across from the White House.
Earlier we reported that Donald Trump has been accused of trying to “rig” November’s midterm elections after he fired the last three members of an independent federal commission.
Derrick Johnson, president of the NAACP civil rights organization, said in response to Trump’s move:
Donald Trump knows that in November voters will reject everything he stands for.
The economy is devastating, he’s starting endless wars resulting in Americans dying, and his paramilitary ICE police force is terrorizing our communities.
Trump is terrified of the sacred power we all hold as voters, and that’s why he wants to rig this election .
Mr President, your plan will fail miserably.
If you think the American people will allow fascism, you are gravely mistaken.
The NAACP will do everything in our power to send people to the polls and make their voices heard.
A White House official has told NBC News that Donald Trump will allow the bipartisan housing bill to become law.
The bill, which Trump has said he will not sign in protest over Congress’s failure to pass his restrictive voting bill, is set to become law at midnight anyway – unless the president vetoes it.
His announcement earlier had left it unclear as to whether he planned to use that veto.
Further to our earlier post that four US senators have said they’ve reached agreement with the Trump administration to move forward with updated legislation on Russia sanctions, we now have this statement from Richard Blumenthal , Lindsey Graham , Jeanne Shaheen and Roger Wicker .
We are proud to announce that we have reached an agreement with the Trump administration to move our updated Russia sanctions legislation forward.
We are very pleased with this significant progress and expect to roll out the legislation very soon .
As Russia intensifies its slaughter of civilians, it is imperative that the legislative and executive branches work together to create tools to exact a heavy price on those who buy Russian oil and natural gas, fueling the Putin war machine.
The White House did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Graham, who met with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv today, said the agreement meant the legislation could move forward, giving Trump fresh tools to help end the war, which is now in its fifth year.
“ We’ve reached an agreement with the White House on a version of the Russian sanctions bill that they will support.
It means it’s going to become law ,” he told reporters, wrapping up his tenth visit to Kyiv.
The legislation, which Graham has been working on with fellow Republicans and Democrats for months, would impose sanctions on countries doing business with Russia, including buyers of its energy exports, over Moscow’s failure to negotiate a peace deal to end its war in Ukraine .
On Wednesday, Trump said that he and Zelenskyy had developed a “very good” relationship, and both Moscow and Kyiv wanted to end the war that began with Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
Explore more on these topics
US politics live with Shrai Popat
Trump administration
US midterm elections 2026