{"id":46694,"date":"2026-02-14T13:24:41","date_gmt":"2026-02-14T21:24:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/occupysf.net\/?p=46694"},"modified":"2026-02-14T13:24:45","modified_gmt":"2026-02-14T21:24:45","slug":"trump-wont-cancel-elections-theres-a-far-more-dangerous-plan-in-motion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/2026\/02\/14\/trump-wont-cancel-elections-theres-a-far-more-dangerous-plan-in-motion\/","title":{"rendered":"Trump Won&#8217;t Cancel Elections. There&#8217;s a Far More Dangerous Plan in Motion."},"content":{"rendered":"\n<figure class=\"wp-block-table\"><table><tbody><tr><td><a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/substack.com\/@chrisarmitage1\">Christopher Armitage<\/a><\/td><\/tr><tr><td>Feb 13, 2026 (cmarmitage@substack.com)<\/td><\/tr><\/tbody><\/table><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full\"><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"1024\" height=\"577\" src=\"https:\/\/occupysf.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/image-36.png\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-46695\" srcset=\"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/image-36.png 1024w, http:\/\/occupysf.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/image-36-300x169.png 300w, http:\/\/occupysf.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/image-36-150x85.png 150w, http:\/\/occupysf.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/image-36-768x433.png 768w, http:\/\/occupysf.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/image-36-250x141.png 250w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>Image from Democracy Docket<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>This is a long article. It\u2019s long because it substantiates a bold claim: that if you are waiting for elections to save this country, you are dangerously wrong. A criminal organization has captured the electoral system, the courts, and the Justice Department itself. The evidence is clear and we will walk through every piece of it.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>But the ending is not despair. The ending is bad people in handcuffs. State-level prosecutors can investigate and charge corrupt federal officials right now, immune from presidential pardon, and thorough investigation will find plenty to charge. Every state that can do this should start tomorrow. Do not wait for a coalition. Do not wait for permission. Do not wait for someone else to go first. Justice is the path to a healthy democracy.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p>Last weekend I spoke to Indivisible Charlotte at their ninth anniversary. Incredible people. The kind of people who give up their Saturdays to discuss ballot access and gerrymandering when they could be doing literally anything else. They had spent the morning discussing get-out-the-vote efforts for 2026, pop-up protests, how to tailor messaging for different communities, how to hyper-localize the issues they talk about, the machinery of democratic participation that has kept this country\u2019s lungs pumping for two and a half centuries.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While speaking to the several hundred activists in attendance, I asked a question: if you are concerned about having free and fair elections in 2026, raise your hand.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Every hand in the room went up.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/substack.com\/redirect\/2\/eyJlIjoiaHR0cHM6Ly9jbWFybWl0YWdlLnN1YnN0YWNrLmNvbS9zdWJzY3JpYmU_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.BdAQ21F1TROm3MpfdwmDiCKElw6FeJ5WOnNnYmEaCwc?&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_source=subscribe-widget&amp;utm_content=187866838\">Upgrade to paid<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It took a moment; some went up fast, some went up slowly, like people checking to see if it was safe. But they all went up.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That same scene is playing out in living rooms and church basements and union halls across the country right now, where people who know something is deeply wrong are still being handed the same playbook and making strides to run it better. We know that Republican leadership is willing to win by rigging the game. They have shown us, and courts have confirmed it. We know they fired the election security officials, gutted the agencies that catch cheating, and sent home the lawyers whose job was to enforce voting rights. We know they control more than half the states. So why is our answer the same playbook, but better?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That gap is what this article is about. Not the threats themselves, though we will walk through every one; not the statistics, though they are devastating and we will use them. The gap between knowing something is wrong and doing something proportional about it. Because the people in those rooms understand the danger, and almost none of them have been told the full scope of what they are up against, and fewer still have been given a framework for response that goes beyond winning elections we can actively see being rigged.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So let me lay it out.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is an assumption running through almost every conversation about American democracy right now, from cable news panels to kitchen-table arguments to the strategy sessions of the most sophisticated political operatives in the country. The assumption is that elections remain the mechanism through which this crisis gets resolved, that if we organize better, register more voters, raise more money, and file more lawsuits, we can win our way through it. The assumption treats the game as legitimate and the task as playing it better.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This article is about what happens when that assumption meets the evidence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Nobody is going to cancel American elections. Elections are too useful; they provide the one thing that raw power cannot generate on its own, which is legitimacy. They let the people in charge say they were chosen, let allies in Congress claim a mandate, let courts defer to the \u201cpolitical process\u201d rather than intervene. Elections, properly managed, are the instrument for consolidating power.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The threat is that elections become something else while still looking the same.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Political scientists have spent the last two decades studying countries where this has already happened, and they have an ugly name for it: competitive authoritarianism. The term describes a system that holds elections, counts votes in front of observers, and lets the opposition campaign, while structuring the rules so that the outcome is effectively predetermined. Sometimes the opposition even wins, which makes the whole arrangement look more legitimate, but captured courts and corrupted institutions make progress nearly unachievable and regression easy. The elections are real; the competition is not. The dice still roll, but one side loaded them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Hungary is the proof that this works.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 2010, Viktor Orban won a legitimate 52 percent of the vote, which the old Hungarian electoral system translated into a two-thirds parliamentary supermajority. He used that supermajority to rewrite the constitution, redraw every electoral district, and redesign the voting system itself, all through legal processes enumerated in the constitution he had just rewritten. He eliminated runoff elections, which had previously forced coalition-building, and created something called \u201cwinner compensation,\u201d a mechanism that gives surplus votes from winning candidates back to the winning party\u2019s national list. In any normal proportional system, those votes would go to an opposition party; in Orban\u2019s, they feed the machine that already won.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Kim Lane Scheppele, the Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Sociology and International Affairs at Princeton, calculated the effect. Winner compensation alone catapulted Fidesz from a simple majority to a constitutional supermajority in three consecutive elections: 2014, 2018, and 2022.\u00b9 One rule. Three supermajorities.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the very first election under the new system, 2014, Fidesz lost 625,000 voters.\u00b2 Eight percent of their support vanished, and they kept their supermajority anyway, winning 44.5 percent of the vote while taking 66.8 percent of the seats.\u00b3 The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe sent observers and called it \u201cfree but not fair.\u201d\u2074 That phrase has applied to every Hungarian election since.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Then Orban captured the media. He did not ban opposition outlets; he bought them, starved them of advertising revenue, or had allies acquire them through friendly holding companies. By 2022, the OSCE found that \u201cthe government\u2019s message was the only one that voters could hear.\u201d\u00b9 Rural voters, who make up Fidesz\u2019s base, have functionally no access to independent news, and the opposition cannot reach them no matter how sharp the message or how polished the campaign, because the infrastructure for delivering it does not exist outside Budapest.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 2022, the Hungarian opposition did everything American political consultants dream about. They unified across the entire ideological spectrum. They ran a single candidate in every district. They polled neck and neck with Fidesz for more than a year. They executed the strategy perfectly. And they lost by twenty points. Not because they ran a bad campaign. Because the system was designed so that running a perfect campaign within it would produce exactly that result. Their participation, their earnest and well-organized participation, gave Orban\u2019s supermajority the appearance of a legitimate mandate. Fidesz took 135 of 199 seats.\u2075<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is what a finished machine looks like. The dice still roll. The opposition still plays. But the system converts any governing-party plurality into a supermajority, and a supermajority lets the ruling party keep rewriting the rules that produce supermajorities. After each loss, the opposition tells itself it will work harder next time, and next time it does work harder, and it loses again, and in the years between those losses the regime uses its supermajority to capture another court, buy another television station, redraw another set of districts. By the time \u201cnext time\u201d arrives, there is less to win and fewer ways to win it. The volunteers who knocked those doors, who organized those rallies, who believed their effort would be converted into political power through the mechanism of free elections, provided the one thing the regime could not manufacture for itself: the appearance that its dominance was earned.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now watch the same machine getting assembled here, piece by piece, using American parts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Start with who gets to vote. In June 2013, the Supreme Court gutted the preclearance requirement of the Voting Rights Act in Shelby County v. Holder (570 U.S. 529), a provision that for almost fifty years had forced jurisdictions with histories of racial voter discrimination to get federal approval before changing any election rules. The Court struck down the formula that determined which jurisdictions fell under that requirement, and the effects landed within hours: Texas announced it would implement a voter ID law that had been blocked under preclearance,\u2076 while Mississippi and Alabama moved the same day. In the decade that followed, at least 29 states passed 94 laws making it harder to vote, with the sharpest impacts falling on communities of color in formerly covered jurisdictions.\u2077 North Carolina passed a law so precisely targeted that the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled it attacked \u201cAfrican Americans with almost surgical precision.\u201d\u2078 A Brennan Center study, drawing on over a billion voter records, found that the racial turnout gap in formerly covered states grew at twice the national rate after Shelby.\u2079<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That was twelve years ago, and we know what the removal of federal election oversight produces because it happened and we measured it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now the removal is accelerating. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the federal body responsible for helping states protect election systems from cyberattacks and foreign interference, has lost roughly a third of its workforce since January 2025.\u00b9\u2070 The Trump administration terminated funding for the Election Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center, an early-warning system that alerted state officials to election security threats crossing state lines.\u00b9\u00b9 The proposed 2026 federal budget would eliminate CISA\u2019s Election Security Program entirely, zeroing out 14 positions and $39.6 million in funding.\u00b9\u00b2 Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes wrote to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem warning that without CISA support, \u201cour capacity to conduct this important work will be severely compromised.\u201d\u00b9\u00b3 Noem did not respond.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Department of Justice\u2019s Civil Rights Division, the sole federal body charged with enforcing the Voting Rights Act nationwide, has lost roughly 70 percent of its attorneys since Harmeet Dhillon took over as assistant attorney general.\u00b9\u2074 Dhillon, who worked as a lawyer challenging the results of the 2020 election, issued a new mission statement for the Voting Section that reframes its purpose around prosecuting voters rather than protecting them; career voting rights attorneys received instructions to dismiss their active cases.\u00b9\u2075 The Brennan Center identified 14 active Section 2 cases at the start of 2025, and the DOJ has since withdrawn from or reversed its position in the majority of them.\u00b9\u2075 The Federal Election Commission, the bipartisan agency that regulates campaign finance, saw its chair targeted for removal in an unprecedented move just as the commission prepared to adjudicate complaints about Elon Musk\u2019s contributions to the Trump campaign.\u00b9\u2076<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Add up what just happened. The federal government has withdrawn from election protection; the agency that helped states defend against cyberattacks has been gutted; the lawyers who enforced voting rights have been sent home; the campaign finance watchdog has been neutralized. All of it has already happened.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>David Becker, a former DOJ official who now leads the Center for Election Innovation and Research, put it plainly in a Votebeat report last week: the internal guardrails that stopped Trump\u2019s attempt to overturn the 2020 election, Bill Barr disputing fraud claims, CISA pushing back on disinformation, national security officials blocking the seizure of voting machines, all of those guardrails depended on individuals who chose to enforce them. \u201cThat line of defense is largely gone,\u201d Becker said, \u201cbecause the primary and perhaps only qualification for being hired by this administration is loyalty to this man.\u201d\u00b9\u2077<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 2020, individual courage backed by functional institutions held the line: Brad Raffensperger in Georgia, Bill Gates in Maricopa County, Jocelyn Benson in Michigan, and Kathy Bernier, a Republican state senator and former county clerk in Wisconsin who publicly defended election integrity and ended up carrying a gun for protection before leaving the legislature.\u00b9\u2077 The institutions that once supported people like Bernier no longer exist in functional form, and without institutional backing, individual courage produces martyrs rather than systemic protection.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Brennan Center\u2019s 2025 survey of local election officials paints an even grimmer picture at the ground level, where the actual mechanics of democracy take place. Sixty percent said they are concerned about federal cuts to election security services,\u00b9\u2078 and fifty-nine percent fear political interference in their ability to do their jobs.\u00b9\u2079 One in three has been harassed, abused, or threatened,\u00b2\u2070 and twenty-one percent say they are unlikely to continue serving through the 2026 midterms.\u00b9\u2079 The people who actually run elections, the ones who set up the machines and train the poll workers and count the ballots at two in the morning, are leaving; the people replacing them have less experience, fewer resources, and weaker institutional support than the officials they replaced.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now move to what voters know. An executive order eliminated CISA\u2019s capacity to help states counter election disinformation,\u00b2\u00b9 and Attorney General Pam Bondi disbanded the FBI\u2019s Foreign Influence Task Force, the unit that had monitored foreign interference in American elections.\u00b9\u2076 Project 2025 called for targeting university researchers who study election misinformation, and the administration has followed through.\u00b9\u2076 The administration is dismantling the infrastructure that delivers accurate election information to voters at the same time that the infrastructure for delivering disinformation expands without constraint; an information environment where one side controls the signal and the other side loses the ability to broadcast a correction is an information environment where elections cannot function as an informed choice.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now move to what votes produce. The Supreme Court declared partisan gerrymandering unreviewable by federal courts in Rucho v. Common Cause (588 U.S. 684, 2019), a ruling that let state legislatures draw maps with whatever partisan advantage they choose and no federal judicial check. In 2025, President Trump personally directed Texas to redraw its congressional map to create five additional Republican-leaning districts, and the legislature complied.\u00b2\u00b2 North Carolina\u2019s Republican legislature redrew its maps after gaining a veto-proof supermajority, projecting an 11-to-3 Republican advantage in a state where statewide elections regularly split down the middle.\u00b2\u00b3<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And then there is Louisiana v. Callais, the case that could end the Voting Rights Act as a tool for protecting minority representation entirely. The Supreme Court heard argument in March 2025, declined to rule, and ordered reargument on a far more sweeping question: whether Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the last remaining federal protection against racial vote dilution, is itself unconstitutional.\u00b2\u2074 In a shift without precedent, the Trump DOJ withdrew the United States\u2019 brief defending Section 2 and reversed its position to argue that the law\u2019s protections are no longer constitutional.\u00b9\u2075 If the Court rules against Section 2, an analysis projects the elimination of 19 congressional seats currently protected by the VRA.\u00b2\u2075 State Representative Terry Landry Jr. of Louisiana described what that means for the people who live in those districts: \u201cThis will affect state legislatures. This will affect city councils. It will affect school boards. You will see a huge impact on minority representation at every level of government.\u201d\u00b2\u2076<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Orban rewrote the constitution, then staffed the courts that interpret the constitution he wrote. The American version follows the same sequence: stack the Supreme Court, then use it to declare gerrymandering unreviewable (Rucho v. Common Cause), preclearance dead (Shelby County v. Holder), racial gerrymandering harder to prove (Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP), and potentially Section 2 itself unconstitutional (Louisiana v. Callais). Once you control the body that decides what the law means, every move you make is \u201clegal\u201d by definition, and every move your opposition makes can be declared illegal at will. The DOJ reversal fits here too: Harmeet Dhillon redirects the Civil Rights Division from protecting voting rights to prosecuting voters, and that becomes the \u201clegal\u201d posture of the United States Department of Justice. Legality stops meaning \u201cconsistent with the rule of law\u201d and starts meaning \u201capproved by the people who captured the system.\u201d That is the final stage of authoritarian consolidation, and it is the one that locks all the other pieces in place.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now put yourself in Texas and watch all of this hit one person at once.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>You are a voter in Harris County, sixty-three years old, and you have voted in every election since 1984. In 2020, you voted by mail; the rejection rate for mail ballots in Texas that year was 0.8 percent. In March 2022, after SB 1 took effect, the statewide rejection rate jumped to 12.4 percent, and in Harris County it hit 19 percent.\u00b2\u2077 Federal District Judge Xavier Rodriguez found that the law violated the Voting Rights Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act, that Black voters faced rejection rates 86.9 percent higher than white voters, and that the state designed these barriers with discriminatory intent.\u00b2\u2078 The Fifth Circuit reversed his ruling, and the mechanisms Rodriguez documented continue operating.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>You want to vote in person instead, but Harris County has 4.8 million people and one ballot drop box, the same number as Loving County, which has 64 residents.\u00b2\u2079 The average transit time by public transportation to reach that single drop box is 88.1 minutes.\u00b2\u2078 You do not own a car; you are one of 143,000 Harris County voters in that situation.\u00b2\u2078 In 2020, Harris County offered drive-through voting, which 127,000 people used, and overnight voting, which nearly 16,000 people used.\u00b2\u2078 Texas banned both.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Political scientists have a name for what happens to people like you inside a system like this. In a 2024 study of competitive authoritarian regimes, the European Journal of Political Research described it as \u201cacquiescence through participation,\u201d a process that \u201clegitimizes the ruling party and simultaneously divides and demoralizes anti-regime actors, thereby diminishing threats to the regime.\u201d\u00b3\u00b3 Andreas Schedler, who coined the term \u201cmenu of manipulation\u201d to describe how authoritarian regimes manage elections, put it more bluntly: the system lets those in power \u201creap the fruits of electoral legitimacy without running the risks of democratic uncertainty.\u201d\u00b3\u2074<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And Texas is one state; Georgia purges voter rolls at rates that would trigger federal intervention if preclearance still existed, and the 50 counties with the highest minority population growth closed 542 polling places after Shelby while the 50 with the lowest minority growth closed 34.\u00b3\u2070 Across the country, states have made it harder for citizens to bypass captured legislatures through ballot initiatives, raising signature thresholds, imposing supermajority requirements, and giving legislatures the power to override results.\u00b3\u00b9 The last escape valve is being welded shut.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Put it together and look at what we are watching being built. Control who votes, through purges, ID laws, and registration barriers. Control where they vote, through polling place closures, drop box restrictions, and early voting cuts. Control what they know, by gutting CISA, disbanding the FBI\u2019s Foreign Influence Task Force, and targeting researchers who track disinformation. Control what their votes produce, through gerrymandering that no federal court can review and the potential elimination of Section 2. Control who counts, by driving out experienced election officials through threats and replacing them with loyalists who owe their positions to the people whose power the counting is supposed to check. And close the last escape valve by making ballot initiatives harder to pass and easier to override.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>No single piece of this is the kill shot. Together they build a system where elections still happen, votes still get counted, observers still watch, and the machine structurally predetermines the outcome across enough cycles that the opposition\u2019s only path to power runs through the handful of jurisdictions the machine has not yet reached. That is competitive authoritarianism, that is what Hungary looks like, and that is what has been built, in public, with our tax dollars, while we watched.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Here is the thing the people in that Charlotte room, and every person doing this work across the country, need to hear. The people building this system need us to keep playing it the way we have been playing it. They need us to keep canvassing, keep phone banking, keep filing lawsuits one county at a time, keep treating each election as though the rules are the real rules. Our participation is the legitimacy. It is what makes the results look earned. The Hungarian opposition gave Orban his mandate by showing up and losing inside a system designed to convert their effort into his power. Their hard work, their real and sincere and well-organized hard work, was the raw material the machine needed to produce the appearance of democratic consent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That is not an argument to stop showing up, and the people in that Charlotte room deserve better than being told their work does not matter. Their work matters enormously; the canvassing matters, the voter registration matters, the phone banks and the door knocks and the rides to the polls. All of it matters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But it matters for what comes next, not for what is.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What comes next is this: the effort has to point somewhere different. We need to elect people who will use the power of the offices we help them win, not people who will hold the office and give good speeches and file press releases about how concerned they are, but people who will govern like the emergency is real.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A governor with executive authority and an attorney general with prosecution power do not need a friendly legislature for the most critical parts of this fight. The governor can direct state election security resources, issue executive orders on election infrastructure protection, and refuse to cooperate with unconstitutional federal demands. The attorney general can investigate and prosecute corruption under existing state law; because of dual sovereignty under Gamble v. United States (587 U.S. 678, 2019), those prosecutions are immune from presidential pardon. Corruption concentrates where accountability is weakest, and thorough prosecution has an asymmetric effect, not because we are targeting one party but because we are being thorough and the chips fall where the corruption is.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The tools for structural independence already exist. The Existentialist Republic team drafted model legislation for state attorneys general to criminally prosecute federal corruption immune from presidential pardon, for states to escrow federal tax revenues triggered by specific constitutional violations including election interference, to force corporations to choose between receiving government contracts and subsidies or donating to politics, and for states to independently investigate and prosecute child sex trafficking networks even when the federal government covers for them. All of it is available for free at&nbsp;<a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/substack.com\/redirect\/b2dd9af6-ed5c-4786-84e2-77e9813a1413?j=eyJ1IjoiZTBpcSJ9.bWAl25BLPe62fl7RlezMOITuH1P4z_cuwPSwD9m_3WI\">The Existentialist Republic<\/a>. Our team is in the process of reaching out to every state legislator in the country with these bills, and readers are independently doing the same, scheduling meetings and making the case in person. I have sat down with state legislators who are preparing to introduce them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I keep coming back to that room in Charlotte, where every hand went up. Those people give their weekends and their evenings and, for some of them, their safety to the work of democratic participation. They have earned the right to know the full scope of what they are up against, and they have earned the right to a response that matches it. Find your governor, your attorney general, your state legislators. Call them. Tell them to prosecute corruption aggressively, fund state election security, and use the power they already have. The model legislation is free at&nbsp;<a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/substack.com\/redirect\/b2dd9af6-ed5c-4786-84e2-77e9813a1413?j=eyJ1IjoiZTBpcSJ9.bWAl25BLPe62fl7RlezMOITuH1P4z_cuwPSwD9m_3WI\">The Existentialist Republic<\/a>. Share it with them. Show up at their offices with it. Make it easy for them to act and uncomfortable for them not to.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p>Democracy merch, Oppositional Federalism booklets at&nbsp;<a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/substack.com\/redirect\/61a4b7bf-3809-4a40-8275-a26eda376170?j=eyJ1IjoiZTBpcSJ9.bWAl25BLPe62fl7RlezMOITuH1P4z_cuwPSwD9m_3WI\">TheExistentialistRepublic.com<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>All educational materials available for free download in the shop at&nbsp;<a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/substack.com\/redirect\/ce0b5994-0950-4fae-9343-739ebc22dfb9?j=eyJ1IjoiZTBpcSJ9.bWAl25BLPe62fl7RlezMOITuH1P4z_cuwPSwD9m_3WI\">BuyMeACoffee.com\/TheER<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/substack.com\/redirect\/2\/eyJlIjoiaHR0cHM6Ly9jbWFybWl0YWdlLnN1YnN0YWNrLmNvbS9zdWJzY3JpYmU_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.BdAQ21F1TROm3MpfdwmDiCKElw6FeJ5WOnNnYmEaCwc?&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_source=subscribe-widget&amp;utm_content=187866838\">Upgrade to paid<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p>Works Cited<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ol>\n<li>Scheppele, K. L. (2024). How Viktor Orban wins. Journal of Democracy, 35(1), 78-93. https:\/\/www.journalofdemocracy.org\/articles\/how-viktor-orban-wins\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Batory, A. (2014, April 16). With the final votes counted, Fidesz has secured a \u2018super-majority\u2019 in Hungary, but it is questionable how fair the election really was. London School of Economics EUROPP Blog. https:\/\/blogs.lse.ac.uk\/europpblog\/2014\/04\/16\/with-the-final-votes-counted-fidesz-has-secured-a-super-majority-in-hungary-but-it-is-questionable-how-fair-the-election-really-was\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Electoral Reform Society. (n.d.). Just how popular is Hungary\u2019s Fidesz? https:\/\/electoral-reform.org.uk\/just-how-popular-is-hungarys-fidesz\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Levine, D. (2022, February 22). OSCE member states must deliver on election observation mission for Hungary. The Hill. https:\/\/thehill.com\/opinion\/international\/595126-osce-member-states-must-deliver-on-election-observation-mission-for\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Freedom House. (2023). Freedom in the world 2023: Hungary. https:\/\/freedomhouse.org\/country\/hungary\/freedom-world\/2023<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (n.d.). The effects of Shelby County v. Holder. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/effects-shelby-county-v-holder<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (2023, June 25). Shelby County v. Holder turns 10, and voting rights continue to suffer from it. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/shelby-county-v-holder-turns-10-and-voting-rights-continue-suffer-it<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>NAACP v. McCrory, 831 F.3d 204 (4th Cir. 2016).<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Morris, K., &amp; Miller, M. G. (2024, February 23). Growing racial disparities in voter turnout, 2008-2022. Brennan Center for Justice. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/growing-racial-disparities-voter-turnout-2008-2022<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Raman, S. (2025, June 3). One-third of U.S. cyber agency CISA has left since Trump took office. Axios. https:\/\/www.axios.com\/2025\/06\/03\/cisa-staff-layoffs-resignations-trump-cuts<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Shur, A. (2025, March 11). CISA halts support for states on election security, U.S. official confirms. Votebeat. https:\/\/www.votebeat.org\/2025\/03\/11\/cisa-ends-support-election-security-nass-nased\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Raman, S. (2025, June 2). CISA projected to lose a third of its workforce under Trump\u2019s 2026 budget. Nextgov\/FCW. https:\/\/www.nextgov.com\/cybersecurity\/2025\/06\/cisa-projected-lose-third-its-workforce-under-trumps-2026-budget\/405726\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Democracy Docket. (2025, March 12). Cybersecurity agency ends support to election security program. https:\/\/www.democracydocket.com\/news-alerts\/cybersecurity-agency-ends-support-to-election-security-program\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Arab American Institute. (2025, June 26). The destruction of the DOJ Civil Rights Division will damage voting rights. https:\/\/www.aaiusa.org\/library\/the-destruction-of-the-doj-civil-rights-division-will-damage-voting-rights<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (2025). The Justice Department is shirking its responsibility to voters. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/analysis-opinion\/justice-department-shirking-its-responsibility-voters<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (2025). Trump administration\u2019s campaign to undermine the next election. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/trump-administrations-campaign-undermine-next-election<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Shur, A. (2026, February 3). As Trump calls for nationalizing voting, election officials draw on lessons of 2020. Votebeat. https:\/\/www.votebeat.org\/2026\/02\/03\/election-officials-2020-guardrails-trump-nationalize-voting\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (2025). Survey finds election officials want more support amid federal cutbacks and ongoing threats. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/analysis-opinion\/survey-finds-election-officials-want-more-support-amid-federal-cutbacks<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (2025). Trump administration\u2019s campaign to undermine the next election. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/trump-administrations-campaign-undermine-next-election<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (2024). Poll of election officials shows high turnover amid safety threats and political interference. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/analysis-opinion\/poll-election-officials-shows-high-turnover-amid-safety-threats-and<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Executive Order on Restoring Freedom of Speech and Ending Federal Censorship. (2025, January 20). The White House. https:\/\/www.whitehouse.gov\/presidential-actions\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Center for American Progress. (2025). Louisiana v. Callais: The end of the Voting Rights Act? https:\/\/www.americanprogress.org\/article\/louisiana-v-callais-the-end-of-the-voting-rights-act\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice analysis of North Carolina redistricting following Republican veto-proof supermajority.<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (2025). Louisiana v. Callais. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/louisiana-v-callais<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>National Public Radio. (2025, October 15). A Supreme Court ruling on Voting Rights Act could help GOP. https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2025\/10\/15\/nx-s1-5567801\/supreme-court-louisiana-redistricting-voting-rights-act<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Southern Poverty Law Center. (2026, January 9). Louisiana v. Callais overshadows current redistricting war. https:\/\/www.splcenter.org\/resources\/stories\/redistricting-war-scotus-callais-decision\/<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Veasey v. Abbott, No. 6:21-cv-01049 (W.D. Tex. 2023), Rodriguez, J., findings of fact regarding SB 1 ballot rejection rates.<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>OCA-Greater Houston v. Lege, consolidated with La Union del Pueblo Entero v. Abbott, findings of fact regarding Harris County ballot access.<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Texas Secretary of State data on drop box allocation under SB 1.<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights analysis of polling place closures in formerly covered jurisdictions post-Shelby County.<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Brennan Center for Justice. (n.d.). Politicians take aim at ballot initiatives. https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/politicians-take-aim-ballot-initiatives<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Oregon State Senator Chris Gorsek, tax escrow bill (2025 Oregon legislative session).<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Kim, N. K. (2024). Party system institutionalization and the durability of competitive authoritarian regimes. European Journal of Political Research, 63(3). https:\/\/onlinelibrary.wiley.com\/doi\/10.1111\/1475-6765.12655<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Schedler, A. (2002). Elections without democracy: The menu of manipulation. Journal of Democracy, 13(2), 36-50.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Christopher Armitage Feb 13, 2026 (cmarmitage@substack.com) Image from Democracy Docket This is a long article. It\u2019s long because it substantiates a bold claim: that if you are waiting for elections to save this country, you are dangerously wrong. A criminal organization has captured the electoral system, the courts, and the&#8230; <a class=\"continue-reading-link\" href=\"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/2026\/02\/14\/trump-wont-cancel-elections-theres-a-far-more-dangerous-plan-in-motion\/\"> Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr; <\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/46694"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=46694"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/46694\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":46696,"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/46694\/revisions\/46696"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=46694"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=46694"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/occupysf.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=46694"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}