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Homeland Security chief says he has no authority to send agents to poll stations despite Trump’s claim

chad-wolf
CNN
Acting Homeland Security director Chad Wolfe is seen at the podium during a White House briefing alongside President Trump and other federal officials.

WASHINGTON, DC -- The U.S. Department of Homeland Security's acting secretary on Sunday cast doubt on the department's authority to send its agents to polling locations after President Donald Trump said he would deploy law enforcement in November to protect against voter fraud.

"We don't have any authority to do that at the department," acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf said on CNN's "State of the Union."

Asked if Trump had asked him to send law enforcement officers to polling centers, Wolf replied: "No, absolutely, he has not. Again, that's not what we do at the Department of Homeland Security."

"We have law enforcement authorities and law enforcement officers at the department, we have express authorities given to us by Congress and this is not one of them," he said, adding, "This is not a mission for the Department of Homeland Security."

Trump, who has repeatedly claimed, without evidence, that voter fraud will undermine November's election results, told Fox News that the administration would send law enforcement officers to polling centers.

"We're going to have sheriffs, and we're going to have law enforcement, and we're going to have, hopefully, U.S. attorneys, and we're going to have everybody and attorney generals (sic)," Trump said.

Federal law prohibits intimidation at the polls and makes it illegal for any "civil" or "military" federal officer to order "troops or armed men" to polling places, unless needed to "repel armed enemies of the United States."

Wolf also said Sunday that there was no intelligence that foreign entities are attempting to hack into voting systems to interfere in the upcoming election, a threat the U.S. intelligence community's top election officials have longed warned about.

"We don't have any intelligence that says they are attacking election infrastructure specifically, which is again what the department focuses on, but we do know about the disinformation campaigns and China, Russia, Iran, all go about that a little differently," Wolf said.

"We're working with other elements of the federal government to address those. We want to make sure at the end of the day that voters, American voters, are deciding American elections," he added.

Last month, the U.S. intelligence community's top election official, Bill Evanina, said during a closed-door House briefing that it would be "extraordinarily difficult" for foreign powers to change actual votes -- as the President repeatedly alleges.

"The diversity of election systems among the states, multiple checks and redundancies in those systems, and post-election auditing all make it extraordinarily difficult for foreign adversaries to broadly disrupt or change vote tallies without detection," Evanina said in his statement.

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