Slow Counts and Loud Lies: California Becomes Ground Zero for 2026's Election Integrity Fight - Democracy in the States' Roundup
It’s Saturday, June 13, 2026, and time for your Democracy in the States: Weekly Roundup. With primary season in full swing, there’s no shortage of political news, and two of the biggest stories of the week — Maine and California — are key reminders of why we should care about renovating our democracy. The systems we put in place to run elections shape both the outcome and how people feel about the outcome in ways that outlast any single race.
This week, our founder Danielle Allen outlines important takeaways from Graham Platner’s Maine primary win. In her piece, “Lessons from Platner’s Victory,” Danielle examines how Platner’s seemingly decisive 72 percent primary win represented the votes of just 16 percent of Maine’s registered voters and fewer than half of the state’s registered Democrats. The pattern, she explains, is not specific to Platner or his coalition. It’s happening in multiple places where low-turnout party primaries advance candidates without meaningful majorities, leaving room for instability, dissatisfaction, and alienation.
In California, the same underlying question played out differently: the New York Times editorial board called the state’s slow ballot counting a “failure of governance” this week, pointing out that allowing mail ballots to arrive days after the Election and chronically overfunding vote-count operations reduces public faith in elections and “serves the interest of conspiracists.” And, unsurprisingly, President Trump used California’s delay as an opportunity to elevate lies about election fraud and sow further distrust amongst the electorate by dispatching a federal prosecutor to a Los Angeles vote-counting center and announcing fraud investigations into the primary.
The shared concern in both these stories — trust in democracy — is a core part of our mission at the Renovator. And, with that, we’re covering these developments and more state-level changes to election administration, redistricting, voter access, ballot measures, state budgets, and the safety net below.
California at the Center
Amidst this discussion of reform, it’s important to point out that Trump’s escalating attacks on California’s primary are not about the mechanics of the June primary. Rather, they’re a part of the Administration’s ongoing effort to undermine election results and challenge past and future Republican losses
NATIONAL: In hopeful sign for mail-in voting, court fast tracks bid to block Trump order.
NATIONAL: DOJ’s latest answer on why it wants state voter rolls: ‘I’m not going to get into the details.’
NATIONAL: States step into voting rights void left by federal rulings.
WISCONSIN: Trump administration’s multiple investigations of the 2020 election may have more to do with 2026.
CALIFORNIA: California is the new ground zero for free and fair elections.
CALIFORNIA: Why does California take so long to count ballots?
Primary Season
Primaries across more than a dozen states this week produced upsets, runoffs, and intraparty reckonings. The midterm map is taking shape.
MAINE: Ranked choice voting will determine Maine’s Democratic nominee for governor.
NORTH DAKOTA: 6 incumbent North Dakota lawmakers ousted in GOP primary.
NORTH DAKOTA: North Dakota Republican leaders urge ‘soul-searching’ after contentious primary.
SOUTH CAROLINA: 2 SC legislators ousted in primaries include GOP sponsor of redistricting bill.
GEORGIA: High-profile races boost GOP turnout, spelling trouble for Democrats in one Georgia Senate seat.
NEVADA: Primary process recap: New voting machines, low turnout, and a premature results release.
NEBRASKA: Nebraska officials certify results for May 12 primary election that ran ‘very smoothly.’
MICHIGAN: Michigan’s U.S. Senate primary highlights divisions within Democratic Party.
WEST VIRGINIA: Del. Kimble challenges election loss, says GOP ballots exceeded number of registered GOP voters.
TENNESSEE: These Republican lawmakers challenged abortion bans. Then they faced backlash.
IDAHO: Immigration enforcement was a top issue for candidates in Idaho’s May primary election.
LOUISIANA: Early voting starts for June 27 party runoffs.
OKLAHOMA: Oklahomans cast their ballots Thursday as early voting begins.
Redistricting
Courts remain the last line of defense as states continue drawing maps to partisan advantage.
FLORIDA: Florida Supreme Court rejects emergency petition to stop DeSantis’ redistricted congressional map.
TENNESSEE: NAACP files for federal court injunction to stop new Tennessee congressional map.
WISCONSIN: Wisconsin Supreme Court agrees to hear second congressional maps challenge.
VIRGINIA: How Virginia Democrats are coping with their redistricting defeat and more headlines.
WASHINGTON: Why AG Nick Brown wants the Supreme Court involved in WA’s redistricting fight.
KANSAS: Who is pushing the constitutional amendment to change Kansas Supreme Court judicial selection?
Voter Rolls, Voter ID, and Registration
Indiana this week canceled or rejected voter registration for more than half of flagged immigrant Hoosiers. It’s one of several moves across states to tighten who’s eligible to vote heading into November.
INDIANA: Indiana rejects, cancels voter registration for more than half of flagged immigrant Hoosiers.
INDIANA: Closed primaries are in vogue with Indiana Republicans. But what would they look like?
LOUISIANA: Louisiana adopts stricter voter ID rules that suffrage advocates call unneeded.
MARYLAND: State election officials ask judge to block access to sensitive voter records.
MARYLAND: Elections panel approves guidelines to ‘address the canvassing issue.’
NEW HAMPSHIRE: After court ruling, here’s what Granite Staters need to register to vote.
ARIZONA: Mayes: Pima County GOP can’t cite a single time the rules they want blocked were misused.
GEORGIA: Republicans are using Callais to defend voter suppression laws, not just gerrymanders.
Ballot Measures
Ohio Republicans sent a voter photo ID constitutional amendment to the ballot this week, while Missouri’s direct democracy process drew a $2 million opposition campaign. Ballot language itself is proving to be its own battleground, with courts in Montana and Florida wading in.
OHIO: Ohio Republican lawmakers send constitutional amendment requiring voter photo ID to ballot.
MISSOURI: Missouri Realtors spend $2 million to fight Amendment 4 limits on citizen initiative petitions.
MISSOURI: Missouri Supreme Court declines to hear appeal over Amendment 5 ballot summary.
SOUTH DAKOTA: Court hears arguments on ballot-question deadlines as petition drive continues past disputed dates.
MONTANA: Montana Supreme Court rewords ballot language for Transparent Election Initiative.
FLORIDA: Lawsuit claims proposed property tax amendment’s ballot language is ‘biased.’
NEW MEXICO: Independent NM governor candidate sues Secretary of State over ‘unjust burden’ to make ballot.
State Budgets
States are facing mounting fiscal pressure as federal funding uncertainty and slow economic growth eat into reserves that legislatures built up post-pandemic.
NATIONAL: States face more budget pressures amid rising costs, slow growth.
ARIZONA: Arizona’s $18.3B budget passes with $1.4B in Trump tax cuts and a data center freeze.
MISSOURI: Missouri auditor warns deep budget cuts loom as surplus nears end.
KENTUCKY: A week after announcing budget cuts, Kentucky gov moves millions to offset them.
NORTH CAROLINA: NC Democrats highlight impacts on state workers’ pay due to years with no state budget.
PENNSYLVANIA: Pa. House votes to fund property tax cut for seniors with a levy targeting big tech companies.
RHODE ISLAND: House approves $15.2B FY27 budget with marquee acquisition: millionaire’s tax.
WASHINGTON: WA governor’s office warns agencies to prepare for ‘significant budget shortfalls.’
The Safety Net
A federal court this week paused USDA funding conditions for SNAP and WIC that states had challenged as unconstitutional, providing some relief in a week when federal cutbacks continued to filter down into food assistance, housing, and healthcare programs.
VIRGINIA: Injunction pauses ‘unconstitutional’ USDA conditions for SNAP, WIC funding to Virginia, other states.
PENNSYLVANIA: Pa. Senate committee moves bills to safeguard social services programs.
WISCONSIN: Wisconsin health dept. introduces BadgerCare recipients to new federal work requirement.
LOUISIANA: Louisiana expands SNAP fruit & veggie bonus to Walmarts statewide.
NEVADA: Summer EBT food benefits are here, redemption rate was 80% last year.
OREGON: Summer food benefits now available to many Oregon families with kids.
NEBRASKA: Nebraska auditor alleges high-income families benefiting from federal WIC Program.
CALIFORNIA: Trump administration blocks federal homelessness funds in Los Angeles.
In Case You Missed It …
“Lessons from Platner’s Victory,” By Danielle Allen, June 11, 2026
“12 Days Out: Alex Bores on AI, Democracy, and the Race for Manhattan,” By Zachey Kliger, June 10, 2026
“Civic Education News Roundup: Introducing Democracy 201!,” By Joanna Kenty, June 8, 2026



California really does need voting count reform. As the NYT editorial points out, Colorado is a better process than doesn’t disenfranchise anyone 😎