I would say maybe because it involves federal elections, not state elections solely. Per a post above this " habeas petition cites Cunningham v. Neagle for the principle that an individual acting pursuant to federal law cannot be guilty of a state crime for those acts and explains that supremacy immunity extends to any person acting under a federal duty". It looks like this falls under federal guidelines which removes the state from responsibility for this whistleblower.
" Can a president pardon someone for a state conviction? "
...no...
Trump is setting up a very public fight. A nice start to the 2020 fraud.
I would say maybe because it involves federal elections, not state elections solely. Per a post above this " habeas petition cites Cunningham v. Neagle for the principle that an individual acting pursuant to federal law cannot be guilty of a state crime for those acts and explains that supremacy immunity extends to any person acting under a federal duty". It looks like this falls under federal guidelines which removes the state from responsibility for this whistleblower.