Speaking directly to President Trump, Gabbard laid out the findings with the gravitas of a patriot committed to truth:
“I’ve got a long list of things that we’re investigating, and we have the best of the best going after this, election integrity being one of them,” she said.
“We have evidence of how these electronic voting systems have been vulnerable to hackers for a very long time and vulnerable to exploitation to manipulate the results of the votes being cast.”
Her words weren’t speculative; they were grounded in what she described as concrete evidence, fueling the administration’s mandate to restore trust in elections.
The vulnerabilities Gabbard referenced aren’t new—reports from as far back as 2017 have shown hackers penetrating voting machines in mere minutes during controlled tests.
Yet, establishment figures and legacy media have consistently downplayed these risks, insisting that elections are secure. Gabbard’s announcement, delivered from one of the highest intelligence posts in the land, shatters that narrative. It aligns squarely with President Trump’s relentless focus on election integrity, a cause that resonates deeply with his base.
The Implications? They’re Profound.
If voting machines can be manipulated, the very foundation of America’s system of free and fair elections—is at risk.
Gabbard didn’t stop at exposing the problem; she pointed to a solution, urging a nationwide shift to paper ballots. “This further drives forward your mandate to bring about paper ballots across the country so that voters can have faith in the integrity of our elections,” she told Trump.
Conservatives have championed paper ballots for years, arguing they’re harder to tamper with and easier to audit. Gabbard’s call is a rallying cry for state legislatures and election officials to act swiftly.
President Trump, never one to shy away from bold action, has already set the tone for reform.
Just a day before his Cabinet Meeting, he signed executive orders directing the Department of Justice to investigate former cybersecurity chief Chris Krebs, who famously declared the 2020 election “secure” despite widespread skepticism.
This isn’t just about one election—it’s about the future.