When Trump announced Patel as his pick to lead the FBI, it was met with shock and concern. Not just because it’s highly unusual for a president to replace an FBI director in the middle of their 10-year term — especially one chosen by that president — but because of how extreme Patel’s views are.
Case in point: Patel has an “enemies” list of “deep state” members who have wronged Trump and should be criminally investigated and prosecuted. At least, that’s what he wrote in his 2023 book Government Gangsters: The Deep State, the Truth, and the Battle for Our Democracy — one of many troubling documents Patel authored that hint at just what he’d do as FBI director. The list doesn’t stop with his book: he has embraced QAnon conspiracy theories, hosted a radio show for the right-wing disinformation-peddling Epoch Times and promoted bogus supplements to help people “detox” from the COVID-19 vaccine.
Given all that, it’s not hard to figure out what sort of views Patel might harbor when it comes to voting and elections in the U.S. But while the FBI’s activities rarely involve voting laws or election administration, it’s not totally out of the question that a Patel-led FBI would work to make elections less safe. Project 2025, for example, calls for the FBI to be completely reformed — including a mandate to prohibit the agency from “engaging, in general, in activities related to combating the spread of so-called misinformation and disinformation by Americans who are not tied to any plausible criminal activity.” It’s a frightening mandate, especially at a time when the heightened threat of election-related violence and harassment of election workers is on the rise, thanks to the proliferation of disinformation.
When I spoke with Lisa Gilbert, the executive vice president of the nonprofit consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen, back in July about how Project 2025 could undermine democracy, she specifically called out the proposals for the FBI. “What the FBI does is investigate and expose corruption, look at political interference and think about holding the wealthy accountable when they break the law,” Gilbert said. “And so if this happened, people with enough money or political influence could be placed above the law at the whim of the President.”
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