I was not deterred. The memory of Jan. 6, 2021, remained seared in my mind. I did not allow hope to become a strategy — a temptation that grows stronger the more you want something to be true. I never sought compromise with those who tried to destroy our democracy.
When Trump took office again, I knew we would face an even greater test. During the four years he was out of power, Trump had weakened the guardrails by constantly attacking them. Good election officials were run out of office and replaced by election deniers.
When he appointed Pam Bondi as attorney general, I was quick to denounce her as an election denier, even as The Washington Post was calling her "qualified" and "serious" and recommending her confirmation.
What I understood, and too many others ignored, is that she was put in place to do Trump's political dirty work. That meant prosecuting his political opponents. It also included undermining future elections.
Once in office, it did not take long for Bondi and her cronies to get to work. In May, the Department of Justice demanded Colorado turn over its voting records from the 2024 and 2020 elections. At the time, many assumed this was simply retribution against the state for having prosecuted and convicted Tina Peters — one of Donald Trump's favorite election deniers.
But then other states started reporting that they were receiving demands for their full, unredacted voter files. Florida, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania all reported getting nearly identical letters.
By the end of last summer, it became clear that Trump's DOJ was trying to obtain the most sensitive voting data from all 50 states plus the District of Columbia. The federal government, which plays no role in administering elections, has never sought this information and has no legitimate need for it.
In August, Trump gave away his plan. In a social media post that received too little attention, Trump wrote:
"States are merely an 'agent' for the Federal Government in counting and tabulating the votes. They must do what the Federal Government, as represented by the President of the United States, tells them."
In essence, Trump was declaring that he alone could decide which ballots count and which are discarded.