Texarkana Gazette

Report: Election vendors are ‘prime targets,’ need oversight

-

ATLANTA — The private companies that make voting equipment and build and maintain voter registrati­on databases lack any meaningful federal oversight despite the crucial role they play in U.S. elections, leaving the nation’s electoral process vulnerable to attack, according to a new report.

The Brennan Center for Justice on Tuesday issued the report, which calls on Congress to establish a framework for federal certificat­ion of election vendors. The authors say this could be establishe­d as a voluntary program similar to how voting machines are certified, with incentives for state and local election officials to use vendors that have completed the process. It would include the establishm­ent of federal standards and the ability for federal officials to monitor compliance and address any violations.

The report’s co-author Lawrence Norden acknowledg­ed it was too late for any of this to happen in time for the 2020 presidenti­al election.

“Even if (Congress) had the will, it couldn’t be passed in time,” said Norden, director of the Election Reform Program at the Brennan Center. “This is another security vulnerabil­ity that Congress hasn’t addressed.”

Norden said congressio­nal inaction has increased the pressure on state and local election officials to secure their voting systems and have measures in place should something go wrong. Although Congress sent $380 million to states last year for election security, Norden said it was a “drop in the bucket” of what is needed as state and local election officials look to fund the replacemen­t of outdated and insecure voting systems, increase cybersecur­ity personnel and add security upgrades.

The Brennan Center, which is based at New York University School of Law, said the most logical agency to handle federal oversight of election vendors would be the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. But that agency has been hobbled in recent years by reduced federal funding and leadership vacancies.

Although two commission­ers were added this year, the agency is searching for a new executive director and general counsel.

The report acknowledg­es the commission does not have the authority that would allow it to certify election vendors. But the commission could take steps through its existing certificat­ion program for voting systems to ask vendors to provide details on cybersecur­ity practices and ownership informatio­n, according to the report. There have been concerns about foreign ownership of election companies operating in the United States.

“Private vendors’ central role in American elections makes them prime targets for adversarie­s,” the report said. “Yet it is impossible to assess the precise level of risk associated with vendors or how that risk impacts election security.”

The report notes that just three companies provide more than 80% of voting systems in the U.S. and that other systems like voter registrati­on databases and electronic pollbooks are also supplied and, in some case, maintained by vendors.

A report by The Associated Press last year found the leading voting-related companies had long skimped on security in favor of convenienc­e and operate under a shroud of financial and operationa­l secrecy despite their critical role in elections.

Federal officials have sought to boost communicat­ions and informatio­n sharing through the formation of a group that brings together representa­tives of the Department of Homeland Security and election vendors. This includes the major firms of Election Systems and Software, Dominion Voting Systems and Hart InterCivic.

There are also efforts to develop a program that would allow authorized security researcher­s access to election equipment so vulnerabil­ities within election systems can be identified and addressed.

The industry, historical­ly opposed to such outside reviews, has signaled a willingnes­s to explore this.

All the major firms have sought to reassure the public and election officials that it takes security seriously, but experts say it’s difficult to confirm given the limited visibility into their operations.

A spokeswoma­n for Election Systems and Software said the company “fully supports” additional oversight and increased security testing of elections equipment, adding the company has submitted its equipment to testing by independen­t security researcher­s.

“ES&S agrees that all vendors should be held accountabl­e for following best practices for all aspects of security, as ES&S does, and agrees that vendors should be American owned and operated, as ES&S is,” said spokeswoma­n Katina Granger.

The report noted that other industries also viewed as critical to national security, such as defense contractor­s, face substantia­l oversight and must comply with various requiremen­ts.

Norden said much of the focus within election security has been on the machines and how best to secure them but critical questions remain about how secure the vendors themselves are.

He noted that former special counsel Robert Mueller described in his report how Russian agents in 2016 targeted employees of a voting technology company and installed malware on the company’s network.

Details on the extent of the breach have not been made public.

“Vendors are responsibl­e for election security in a way that folks probably don’t understand,” Norden said.

“When we talk about election security, we talk about what election officials are doing, but we’ve left this big part of the puzzle out of the discussion.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ A man feeds a ballot card into a digital voting machine Aug. 16 during a demonstrat­ion in Raleigh, N.C. A new report says the nation’s elections are vulnerable to attack due to a lack of robust federal oversight of the private companies that are involved in everything from manufactur­ing voting systems to maintainin­g voter registrati­on databases.
Associated Press ■ A man feeds a ballot card into a digital voting machine Aug. 16 during a demonstrat­ion in Raleigh, N.C. A new report says the nation’s elections are vulnerable to attack due to a lack of robust federal oversight of the private companies that are involved in everything from manufactur­ing voting systems to maintainin­g voter registrati­on databases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States