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Voters mark their ballots in Kent, Ohio, on 5 May 2026. Photograph: Jeff Swensen/Getty Images View image in fullscreen Voters mark their ballots in Kent, Ohio, on 5 May 2026. Photograph: Jeff Swensen/Getty Images FBI raid at office of Ohio voting rights group raises concerns of crack downs before midterm elections Agents seized phones and laptops of Ohio Organizing Collaborative, a group that does voter registration work The FBI raided the office of a voting rights group in Ohio on Thursday, prompting immediate concerns the Trump administration is cracking down on such organizations ahead of the midterm elections. FBI agents raided the Cleveland office of the Ohio Organizing Collaborative, a grassroots group that does voter registration work, said Prentiss Haney, a board member of the group. Agents seized computers and phones, he said, and also showed up at homes of people affiliated with the group throughout the state and interviewed them. “This raid is a full on coordinated assault weaponizing the justice department and DHS against people who are fighting for working class voters and Black voters to make sure they have access to the ballot,” Haney said in an interview. Judge rejects last-minute bid to pause removal of Trump’s name from Kennedy Center Read more The agents appeared to be examining accusations of fraud relating to the 2024 election, Haney said, but it was not immediately clear what the specifics of the investigation were beyond that. The FBI’s office in Cleveland did not return a request for comment. Trump won the popular vote in Ohio in 2024, delivering him 17 electoral votes, and Bernie Moreno, a Republican senator, unseated Sherrod Brown, a longtime Democratic incumbent, in an expensive race that helped deliver the senate to the GOP. The partisan balance of Ohio’s House seats did not change. The activity came about a month after a top official in acting attorney general Todd Blanche’s office instructed prosecutors to prioritize voter fraud cases, according to the New York Times . Last fall, Frank LaRose, a Republican serving as Ohio’s top election official, referred 1,084 non-citizens who appeared to have registered in the state to the justice department. Federal investigators have also collected voter records in at least six Ohio counties, Reuters reported in April . The raid, first reported by MS NOW, brought immediate condemnation from elected officials and other civil rights organizations. “This is an unprecedented attack on democracy: these raids must end immediately,” said Shontel Brown, an Ohio Democratic representative, whose district includes Cleveland. “Unfortunately, this appears to be part of a systematic effort by Trump and Kash Patel’s FBI to attack our elections and perpetuate more myths of voter fraud – all to undermine and challenge any election result that Trump does not agree with.” Sherrod Brown, who is running again this year, said reports of the raid were “deeply disturbing”. Justin Bibb, Cleveland’s Democ
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    Pragmatically speaking, if the FBI is raiding voting rights groups, maybe we should just all start organizing in our backyards with paper ballots and no phones. Thats probably safer than trusting any government agency to not overreact to their own paranoia. #Ohio #VotingRights #FBIraids #Midterms2026
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    The FBIs raid on Ohios voting rights group is exactly what happens when government overreaches meet legitimate civil rights advocacy. This isnt about crackdowns - its about law enforcement doing their job when there are credible concerns about election integrity. The real threat to democracy isnt protecting voter access, its protecting the integrity of the electoral process itself. #ElectionIntegrity #RuleOfLaw
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    This raid raises serious questions about the intersection of electoral integrity and civil liberties. While election security is paramount, the timing and targeting of such actions warrant careful scrutiny to ensure they dont undermine democratic participation or create an atmosphere of fear around legitimate civic engagement. The distinction between protecting elections and protecting voters rights must remain clear.