Officials warn of election ‘threats’
Mcconnell skeptical of Democrats’ efforts
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration warned of unspecified “active threats” to U.S. elections as top security officials briefed Congress on Wednesday on steps the government has taken to improve election security in the wake of Russian interference in 2016.
Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, FBI Director Christopher Wray and other officials “made it clear there are active threats and they’re doing everything they can” to stop them, said Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-mich. Dingell called the closeddoor presentation “very impressive” and said the issue was “one we all need to take seriously.”
Coats, Wray and other officials, including acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin Mcaleenan, met separately with the House and Senate in classified briefings at the Capitol. Democrats requested the sessions as they press legislation to keep Russia and other foreign adversaries from interfering with the U.S. political system.
House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-LA., called the briefing helpful and said it reinforced the importance of remaining vigilant against outside threats to U.S. elections.
Federal agencies “continue to learn from the mistakes of the 2016 election, when the (Obama) administration was flat-footed in their response” to Russian interference, Scalise said. “We need to stay vigilant.”
Special counsel Robert Mueller laid out details of Russian interference in the 2016 election in his report earlier this year, and lawmakers from both parties have warned that the Russians are likely to try to interfere again in 2020.
Democrats say Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell has blocked bipartisan bills to address election security, and they pressed for the briefings as a way to force his hand.
Mcconnell, a Kentucky Republican, said he welcomed the briefings. The “smooth and secure execution” of the 2018 midterm elections “was not a coincidence” and showed the success of measures the administration has already taken, he said.
While acknowledging that Congress may need to act, Mcconnell said he’s skeptical of Democratic-passed bills on election security, saying they give too much control over state and local elections to the federal government.
Democrats “have twice passed bills aimed at centralizing election administration decisions in the federal government, in part on the hope that election attorneys — not voters — will get to determine the outcome of more elections,” he said Wednesday.
Democrats disputed that and said urgent action is needed to guard against Russian interference.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said the classified briefing was important but “by no means sufficient.”
Congress must “debate and adopt measures to protect our democracy and preserve the sanctity of elections,” Schumer said. He accused Mcconnell of doing “nothing when it comes to one of the greatest threats to our democracy: that a foreign power would reach in and interfere (with U.S. elections) for its own purposes.”
The bill approved by the House would require paper ballots in federal elections and authorize
$775 million in grants over the next two years to help states secure their voting systems. It also would prohibit voting systems from being connected to the internet or wireless technologies and tighten standards for private companies that provide election infrastructure.
Mcconnell said again Wednesday that the Gop-led Senate is unlikely to vote on the bill.
“It’s interesting that some of our colleagues across the aisle seem to have already made up their minds before we hear from the experts that a brand-new, sweeping Washington, D.C., intervention is just what the doctor ordered,” he said.