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  • 13 minutes ago
Election security grants could sideline the local coordinators who turn threats into funding decisions. The Hill reported Senator Markwayne Mullin defended tying election-security money to counterterrorism funding, forcing coordinators to prove the link. The quiet replacement is a checkbox replacing judgment—not a robot taking the job. Who gets replaced first: the coordinator, or the person still calling this security? Pick a side in the comments and send this to them.

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00:00Mullen's funding moves sidelines election coordinators.
00:03Election security grant coordinators turn local threats into funding,
00:07narrow the lane, and their judgment becomes expendable.
00:11The Hill reported Senator Mark Wayne Mullen defended tying election security funding to
00:15counterterrorism money. Coordinators could face one narrower test. Show the link.
00:21That's the quiet replacement. Not a robot, but a rule that turns expertise into a checkbox.
00:26Who gets replaced first? The coordinator, or the person still calling Mullen's move security?
00:31Send this to them.
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