U.S. President Donald Trump at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S., June 15, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
In Cleveland, Ohio on Thursday, June 11, FBI agents searched the local office of Ohio Organizing Collaborative — a nonpartisan voter registration group — seized cell phones and computers, and visited the homes of people involved with the group. According to Salon's Bob Hennelly, the search is "being blasted as heavy-handed voter intimidation ahead of the 2026 midterms."
Interviewed by The Guardian, Prentiss Haney — a member of the nonprofit group's board of trustees — described the raid as a "full-on coordinated assault weaponizing the Justice Department and DHS (the U.S. Department of Homeland Security) against people who are fighting for working-class voters and Black voters to make sure they have access to the ballot." And Hennelly, in Salon, stresses that Ohio is a high priority for Republicans in the midterms — as they don't want to lose ground in a state that has been moving in their direction in recent years.
"Ohio's swing state status ended after President Donald Trump racked up eight-point wins in 2016 and 2020 that grew to an 11-point margin in 2024," Hennelly explains. "The GOP holds the governorship and lopsided majorities in both houses of the state legislature…. Back in April, Reuters reported that federal agents with the Department of Homeland Security were asking for individual voter registration information and 'voting histories for dozens of voters-records that include driver's license numbers and other confidential data' from six Ohio counties."
Hennelly adds, "This latest move follows on the heels of the FBI seizing ballots in Georgia from the 2020 election and the DOJ (the U.S. Department of Justice) suing 30 states as well as Washington D.C. for election related data, like voter registration lists as well as ballots from past elections."
Former President Barack Obama won Ohio in both 2008 and 2012, but President Donald Trump carried the Buckeye State in every presidential election after that. And in 2024, former Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) was voted out of office — one of the many disappointments Democrats have suffered there in recent years. But Brown is running for the Senate again in 2026, and Jerry Austin — an Ohio-based political consultant — believes that Republicans are worried about his state in the midterms.
Austin told New York City's WBAI-FM, "Well, the bad news is what happened Thursday with the FBI, but that's also the good news because Ohio must be in play in 2026. They wouldn't be coming to a state that Trump won three times."
Historian and union consultant Joseph Wilson, a union consultant, described the FBI search of Ohio Organizing Collaborative's Cleveland Office as an "act of desperation that will backfire and only inspire greater voter turnout."
Wilson told Salon, "If we are going to talk about partisanship and the FBI, we have to talk about fidelity and partisanship to the United States Constitution and to voting rights. And historically, the FBI has played a diabolical role in terms of civil rights, human rights and political rights starting with Jay Edgar Hoover and his attacks and subterfuge against Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement."
