Amid lower rates of voter faith, officials say elections are safe and secure — and they’re working to prove it to the public
Article Summary
Amid eroding trust in elections, Illinois county clerks are working to repair voter trust and campaign against misinformation.
The effort, led by a bipartisan group, seeks to address partisan claims of fraud, fear of foreign breaches, rampant misinformation and volatile security infrastructure funding.
Clerks say they’ve seen the effects in voter concerns, but their efforts to raise awareness and increase voter education have been successful.
This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.
By JENNA SCHWEIKERT
Capitol News Illinois
jschweikert@capitolnewsillinois.com
Trust in U.S. elections is eroding. Between skepticism about redistricting, fear about immigration agents at the polls, and unproven claims about widespread election fraud, Americans are losing confidence in the accuracy and security of their elections.
But many local election authorities say their effort to address misinformation and reassure voters is beginning to turn the tide, as they’ve seen less voter concern about election security.
Voter confidence in accurate vote counts dropped 17% across party lines in about a year, according to two nationwide polls from the Center for Transparent and Trusted Elections at the University of California San Diego. One poll was conducted just after the 2024 presidential election, the other in late 2025, in collaboration with UCSD’s Yankelovich Center for Social Science Research.
Voters had different reasons for why they are skeptical about the midterms — and those reasons broke across party lines, with more Republicans naming redistricting as a concern and Democrats more worried about the presence of immigration agents at the polls.
Although 60% of respondents indicated they did have confidence in the midterms, the survey paints a bleak picture ahead of this fall. And it was followed by headlines about the Supreme Court’s ruling weakening a key racial redistricting provision in the Voting Rights Act, the Department of Justice suing states for access to voter records and a report finding a Trump appointee encouraged the DOJ raid of election offices in Fulton County, Georgia.
This is all on the heels of President Donald Trump’s repeated, but disproven, claims of widespread voter fraud and falsified 2020 election results. Now, he’s staffed his federal administration with officials who echoed his claims in 2020 and refuse to walk them back, doubling down in some cases.
For one, Kash Patel, the embattled director of the Federal Bureau of Investigations, is overseeing the investigation that led to the Fulton County raid and a subpoena of Maricopa County, Arizona, records. Just last week, the administration demanded names of election officials who worked in the county during the 2020 elections.
Much like Pam Bondi, the former director of the Justice Department, Patel would not state that Joe Biden won the 2020 election in his confirmation hearing.
The Trump administration’s efforts to establish a narrative of fraud, lies and vote stealing during Biden’s presidency are not for nothing. As the UCSD poll shows, Americans of both parties have begun to doubt if they can trust upcoming elections. It makes for a tense environment as the country rockets towards the 2026 midterms and as rumors swirl around potential 2028 presidential nominees.
But across the country, and within Illinois, election authorities of both political parties say American elections are, and will stay, fair and secure. While county clerks report having an impact on their local constituencies, the disparate nature of U.S. elections — while widely considered a strength — make communicating to a broader audience a greater challenge.
Local election authority
Authority over administering elections, by federal law, is given to the states. In Illinois, elections are administered either by the 102 county clerks or the six municipal election commissions. The Illinois State Board of Elections works with these local election authorities in an advisory capacity.
Every state has differing laws on election administration, and each Illinois county clerk conducts their elections a little differently. The needs and wishes of the voting population of Chicago and suburban Cook County, for example, are much different than those of Tazewell or Sangamon County.
That environment makes things complicated, but local authority is part of the strength of Illinois elections, according to Republican Tazewell County Clerk John Ackerman.