White House’s chilling warning about midterm elections: ‘Can’t guarantee an ICE agent won’t be around polling locations’

The IndependentThe Independent

White House’s chilling warning about midterm elections: ‘Can’t guarantee an ICE agent won’t be around polling locations’

Andrew Feinberg

Thu, February 5, 2026 at 8:41 PM UTC

5 min read

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Key takeaways

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  • The White House did not rule out the possibility of deploying ICE agents to polling sites during the upcoming midterm elections in an effort to influence voter turnout and potentially secure Republican victories.
  • Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated that she could not guarantee that ICE personnel would not be present at polling locations in November, following former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon's call for Trump to deploy ICE around election sites.
  • FBI agents, accompanied by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, executed a search warrant at Fulton County, Georgia election facilities and seized materials from the 2020 election, a move that has raised concerns among Democrats and legal experts.

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The White House refused to rule out following through on a call for Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents to “surround the polls” when voters cast ballots in this November’s midterm elections as a way of depressing Democratic turnout and boosting chances of a Republican victory this fall.

Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on Thursday said she could offer “no guarantee” that ICE personnel would not be stationed at polling sites when Americans are in the process of choosing whether to extend the Republican stranglehold on power at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue.

She had been asked about former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon’s recent call for Trump to deploy ICE around election sites on his War Room podcast on Tuesday, just days after Trump himself called for a Republican “takeover” of vote-counting in Democratic-led states and municipalities.

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Bannon had endorsed Trump’s suggestion that his party seize control of voting machinery and counting, telling listeners: “You’re damn right we’re going to have ICE surround the polls come November.”

When pressed on whether Trump was considering heeding Bannon’s advice, Leavitt demurred, telling reporters that the idea of putting ICE at polling sites wasn’t something she’d “ever heard the president consider.”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 5, 2026. REUTERS/Al Drago (REUTERS)
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 5, 2026. REUTERS/Al Drago (REUTERS)

But when asked to pledge that Trump would keep immigration agents away from voting, she said “can't guarantee that an ice agent won't be around a polling location in November” and called the matter “a very silly hypothetical question” and “disingenuous” while stating that she hadn’t heard Trump “discuss any formal plans.”

Leavitt’s comments came just a week after FBI agents — accompanied by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — executed a search warrant at Fulton County, Georgia election facilities and seized ballots and other materials from the election Trump lost to his successor turned predecessor Joe Biden in November 2020.

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Gabbard’s presence at the search has alarmed Democrats and legal experts who have pointed out that the former Hawaii congresswoman’s current position gives her no authority to conduct domestic law enforcement tasks or be present for a search of an American election facility.

Trump himself has been fixated on Fulton County since record-high Black turnout in 2020 made him the first Republican to lose the Peach State since former president George HW Bush lost to Bill Clinton there in the 1992 presidential election.

Gabbard reportedly used her mobile phone to set up a call between Trump and the agents searching the location, and Trump himself said last week that the DNI had been there “working very hard on trying to keep the election safe.”

She said in a letter released last week that her presence in Atlanta had been “requested by the President and executed under my broad statutory authority to coordinate, integrate, and analyze intelligence related to election security,” but her account was contradicted by Trump during a speech Thursday at the National Prayer Breakfast in which he said Gabbard had gone there at the request of Attorney General Pam Bondi.

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Pressed to explain the contradiction, Leavitt did not answer directly but instead claimed that Gabbard had been there “to make sure that American elections are free of foreign interference and safe and secure.”

“It's the media who has said there's Russian interference in American elections ... you should all be very happy that we finally have an administration that is looking into that,” she said.

Both the Department of Justice and the Senate Intelligence Committee — which was led at the time by Secretary of State Marco Rubio when he was a senator from Florida — have reported extensively on what a report by former FBI Director Robert Mueller called a “sweeping and systematic” campaign by the Russian government to interfere in the 2016 election on Trump’s behalf by a variety of means.

But Leavitt did not explain what, if any foreign interference had allegedly taken place in the 2020 race.

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A trio of recounts by Georgia officials have each confirmed that Biden won the Peach State’s electoral votes that year.

But Trump continues to insist he won despite no evidence to support his claims. During an interview on former FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino’s relaunched eponymous podcast, Trump endorsed a racist conspiracy theory which posits that Democrats’ opposition to harsh anti-immigration measures is part of a deliberate effort to pack voter rolls with people who are not in the country legally despite the fact that non-citizens are not permitted to vote and almost never attempt to do so.

The president claimed that the Biden administration’s reversal of border policies instituted during his first term was meant to bolster the Democratic Party’s fortunes at the polls and argued that Republicans in Congress should respond by taking control of elections in Democratic-run jurisdictions even though the U.S. Constitution specifically allocates that responsibility to state and local governments rather than the federal government.

“People were brought to our country to vote, and they vote illegally ... and it’s ... amazing that the Republicans aren’t tougher on it. The Republicans should say ‘we want to take over,’” he said.

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Trump then argued that the GOP “should take over the voting in at least 15 places” and “nationalize” voting in defiance of the Constitution because those places “are so crooked.”

He told Bongino there are “states that I won that show I didn’t win” and teased that listeners would “see something in Georgia” after the FBI seized ballots that were counted and recounted three times that year, with each count confirming his loss to Biden there by 11,779 votes.

“You're going to see some interesting things come in. But you know, like the 2020, election, I won that election by so much,” Trump said.

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