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Norms Impact

California will dispatch observers to watch DOJ’s election monitors

California is sending state observers to shadow DOJ election monitors, a breakdown of the norm that federal election oversight operates without partisan suspicion or retaliatory counter-surveillance.

Elections

Oct 27, 2025

Sources

Summary

California Attorney General Rob Bonta said the state will dispatch observers to watch federal election monitors the Trump administration is sending ahead of California’s Nov. 4 redistricting election.
The move reflects an escalating institutional standoff in which state officials treat a Justice Department monitoring deployment as a potential instrument of partisan pressure rather than neutral oversight.
The practical consequence is a contested monitoring environment at polling places, with California attempting to deter interference and federal authorities asserting an integrity-enforcement role.

Reality Check

Using federal election monitoring in a way that even credibly appears designed to intimidate voters or “lay the groundwork” to delegitimize outcomes sets a precedent that corrodes equal access to the ballot and invites government-by-suspicion against our own votes. The conduct described is not clearly criminal on this record, but if federal staff or associated actors interfere with voting or intimidate voters, it can implicate federal protections such as 18 U.S.C. § 594 (intimidation of voters) and the Voting Rights Act’s anti-intimidation provisions, with exposure turning on what monitors actually do on the ground. Even without provable criminal intimidation, deploying and counter-deploying observers as partisan deterrence normalizes election administration as a battlefield, weakening public confidence and making future challenges easier to manufacture.

Media

Detail

<p>U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Friday that the U.S. Department of Justice would deploy staff to monitor polling places during next week’s off-year elections in California and New Jersey, stating the purpose was to uphold “the highest standards of election integrity.”</p><p>On Monday, California Attorney General Rob Bonta said California will deploy its own observers to watch the federal monitors in advance of California’s Nov. 4 election involving a congressional redistricting measure. Bonta said the monitors “are not going to be allowed to interfere in ways that the law prohibits,” and said the request for federal monitors originated with the Republican Party. California GOP Chair Corrin Rankin asked Justice Department civil rights head Harmeet Dhillon to send the monitors.</p><p>Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday the federal monitoring deployment amounted to voter intimidation and suppression. The DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and Dhillon posted on X that federal election observers have been sent for decades under Democratic administrations.</p>