angevin Unveils Election Security Task Force Final Report and Recommendations

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Representative Jim Langevin (D-RI) joined his colleagues on the Congressional Task Force on Election Security to unveil their final report, which includes ten specific recommendations on what the federal government and states can and should be doing to secure our nation’s elections.

Russia’s unprecedented interference with the country’s elections in 2016 – including targeting 21 states’ voting systems – exposed serious national security vulnerabilities to our election infrastructure – which includes voting machines and voter registration databases. Members of the Task Force on Election Security also introduced legislation, the Election Security Act, to implement the recommendations of the report.

“As co-chair of the Congressional Cybersecurity Caucus and former Secretary of State of Rhode Island, I was pleased to work with the Task Force to produce this election security report,” said Representative Langevin. “With the 2018 elections just months away, Congress must act now to bolster our election cybersecurity especially as intelligence leaders are confident that Russian interference will not stop. The report recommendations and corresponding legislation are important first steps in restoring the American people’s trust in our democratic system and securing our elections for years to come.”

The Congressional Task Force on Election Security was created in June 2017 under the direction of Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi by Co-Chairs Bennie Thompson (D-MS) and Robert Brady (D-PA). Other members of the Task Force include Representatives Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), Cedric L. Richmond (D-LA), and Val Demings (D-FL).

“It has been over a year since Russia’s campaign to interfere in our elections and undermine our democracy was uncovered, and yet neither the Trump White House nor Republicans in the House have done anything of substance to stop it from happening again,” said Representative Thompson. “This inaction to an attack on our democracy should be appalling to all citizens. We know if we do nothing to protect elections – the very root of our democracy – Russia will do the same again. We formed this Task Force so to investigate the vulnerabilities in our voting systems and create common sense solutions to close any security gaps. States cannot fight sophisticated adversaries like Russia alone. It is time for Congress to act to institute reforms and provide substantial assistance. With the next federal election less than nine months away, we cannot afford to waste any more time.”

“There is no doubt that Russia interfered in the 2016 election and targeted 21 states’ voting systems. And we can expect them to return,” said Representative Brady. “The Election Security Task Force has been hearing from state and local officials over the past six months. They know they need to strengthen their voting systems, and they need Congress to act. But Republicans have been asleep at the wheel. To date, Republicans have not even held a single full-committee hearing on the security of our nation’s elections. The first congressional primary election of 2018 is on March 6 — only a few weeks away. The general election is in under nine months. We do not have a minute to waste.”

Report Recommendations:

· Congress should immediately make the nearly $400 million authorized in the Help America Vote Act available to states to replace aging, less secure voting machines with those using voter-verified paper ballots.

· Congress should provide ongoing funding to states to secure their IT systems and voter databases, train personnel on cybersecurity, and end the crisis-to-crisis approach to addressing vulnerabilities in elections.

· Congress should adequately fund the Department of Homeland Security and the Election Assistance Commission so they can properly fulfill their mission to assist states in securing their election infrastructure.

· States should require voting machine vendors to follow cybersecurity standards and notify of potential breaches.

· The Federal government should develop a National Strategy to Counter Efforts to Undermine Democratic Institutions.

· The Intelligence Community should produce election security threat assessments six months before every federal election.

· DHS should maintain the designation of election infrastructure as a critical infrastructure subsector.

· States should conduct risk-limiting audits to determine vote accuracy after elections, as Rhode Island already does.

· States should prioritize cybersecurity training for their election officials, IT staff, and poll workers and the federal government must assist in this effort.

· DHS should expedite the clearance process for the chief election official in every state and establish channels for sharing relevant threat and intelligence information.


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