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Most Republican members of Congress made few public statements about reported election security concerns. The same lawmakers showed little movement on a voting restriction measure.
msmagazine.comMost G.O.P. lawmakers had little to say about the president's claims of election vulnerabilities, and he did not appear to move the needle on the voting restriction bill he championed. The New York Times reported that Republican members largely avoided direct comment on the statements regarding election processes.
The same reporting noted that the voting restriction bill received no visible increase in support among the lawmakers. Observers recorded no immediate shift in public positions or legislative activity tied to the statements. The coverage indicated that the president's statements and the bill did not generate measurable new engagement from the lawmakers in the period examined.
These outlets didn't split into competing frames — coverage was uniform.
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nypost.comPresident Donald Trump will attend Sunday's match between Argentina and Spain. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed the plans on Thursday.
Al JazeeraHomeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin announced July 17 that states must secure voting machines and update voter rolls to qualify for federal election funding. He cited 250,000 non-citizens on rolls in four states and nearly 278,000 nationwide.
nationalpost.comA federal judge found the dismissal of FEMA Chief Financial Officer Mary Comans breached civil-service rules. The February 2025 termination followed accusations over migrant shelter payments.