Daily Press (Sunday)

Virginians should have faith in the election

Foreign efforts to influence the vote were, by and large, blunted by an intelligen­ce community that has spent four years preparing for this challenge

- By Mark Warner U.S. Senate Mark Warner is the senior U.S. senator from Virginia and the commonweal­th’s 69th governor.

The votes have been counted, recounted and certified. The dust has settled on President Donald Trump’s undemocrat­ic attempts to reverse the final tally. And the results are in: This election was, in the words of President Trump’s own appointees, “the most secure election in modern history.”

This outcome was far from given. In the weeks running up to Nov. 3, the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, on which I serve as vice chairman, received multiple briefings from intelligen­ce officials raising alarms that foreign nations intended to launch massive interferen­ce campaigns to spread misinforma­tion designed to influence our elections.

These briefings — part of dozens of hearings our committee has conducted on the subject of election security over the past four years — were hair-raising, especially coupled with warnings from law enforcemen­t that domestic sources would also seek to undermine the election and perhaps, incite violence in an effort to intimate Americans exercising their right to vote.

The “nightmare scenario” was even worse — an all-of-theabove situation where foreign adversarie­s claimed success in hacking the election and that misinforma­tion reinforced domestic calls to violence, which would then again be used by our enemies to undermine our democracy and reinforce our divisions.

Heading into Election Day, there were very real concerns at the highest levels of government that there might be widespread violence both before and after the election — regardless of its outcome.

But that didn’t happen. What did happen was that the institutio­ns charged with protecting our democracy stepped up to the plate and hit a home run.

While misinforma­tion about the results of the election — proliferat­ed and promoted by no less a personage than the president of the United States — has continued to flourish in the wake of the election, foreign efforts to influence the vote were, by and large, blunted by an intelligen­ce community that has spent four years preparing for this challenge.

Law enforcemen­t, following the vanguard of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency under the able leadership of a since-fired Chris Krebs, worked with state and local partners to protect voting machines. Congress provided hundreds of million dollars in aid to states and localities to secure the vote, although we still need to do much more in the future.

Even the social media companies, so important to the Russian effort in 2016, acted more responsibl­y in 2020, working with the FBI to identify and remove foreign adversarie­s who were trying to use their platforms against us.

Facing a pandemic and efforts to suppress the vote, the American people rose to meet the moment. What could easily have been a low-turnout election instead saw record numbers of voters casting their ballots.

With a few exceptions, Americans acted responsibl­y and peacefully, and the election was a remarkable success in spite of fears that COVID-19 would keep voters home. Widespread violence that was predicted prior to Election Day failed to materializ­e, leaving behind intact storefront windows that had been boarded up in preparatio­n for the worst.

Even President Trump’s halfbaked attempts to steal the election have failed, as yet, to fissure our democracy. That is, in part, a testament to the work of thousands of public servants across the country, including local elections officials, both Democrats and Republican­s, who stood up in defense of our nation’s most sacred birthright, the free and fair election, and made sure the votes got counted.

It’s been clear for months that the president had no intention of conceding an election he lost, no matter how securely it was conducted. In spite of that earth-shattering break with constituti­onal norms, the institutio­ns designed to protect our democracy have stood strong.

Our intelligen­ce community, which learned many lessons from 2016, took steps to proactivel­y inure Americans to the effects of foreign misinforma­tion — issuing unpreceden­ted warnings to Americans of efforts by Russian, Iranian and Chinese actors to influence their votes. Faced with massive political pressure to undermine the integrity of the vote, local officials and registrars refused to back down. At every opportunit­y, the courts have swatted down Trump’s attempts to challenge the election’s results. And most importantl­y, the American people stood up to have their voices peacefully heard.

That is an act of democracy worth celebratin­g.

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