California Governor Gavin Newsom issued a sharp rebuke of the federal Justice Department’s decision to send monitors to polling sites in his state ahead of the November 4 election, stating the agency “has no business” intervening in a purely state-run vote.
The DOJ confirmed it will deploy observers to six counties—including Los Angeles, Fresno, and Kern—to oversee voter access and ballot processing as part of its election-monitoring mission. The governor’s office called the move “a deliberate attempt to intimidate voters.”
In response, DOJ officials and legal experts noted that such monitoring has been used under both Democratic and Republican administrations for decades, pointing out the department’s authority supports transparency under the Voting Rights Act. One senior DOJ advisor posted online, “Calm down, bro,” in reaction to what they described as overreaction from the governor’s camp.
The dispute adds tension to the lead-up to Proposition 50 in California—a constitutional amendment on the ballot that would allow the state to redraw its congressional districts. Critics of the DOJ’s presence say it risks politicizing federal law-enforcement involvement in local elections, while defenders argue the oversight is routine, non-partisan and designed to safeguard voting rights.
As campaigning intensifies across the state, this clash underscores the broader battle over who controls U.S. elections at the federal and state level—and how much federal involvement citizens view as acceptable.
