Gulf Today

Gen Z is key to securing America’s elections

- David Levine and Massimilia­no Albanese, Tribune News Service

America’s elections are under unpreceden­ted threat. From foreign interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al race to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on, the integrity of our democratic process has been repeatedly targeted in recent years. Safeguardi­ng it against future atacks requires an oten-overlooked resource: Generation Z. Young Americans have come of age during a time of unparallel­ed challenges to our democracy. They have witnessed the erosion of trust in our institutio­ns, the rise of polarizati­on and misinforma­tion, and the vulnerabil­ity of our electoral systems to both domestic and foreign malicious actors. This tumultuous introducti­on to the political landscape has let many in Gen Z both disillusio­ned and eager to be part of the solution. Yet when we speak with election officials and their partners about engaging the next generation in their work, the conversati­on centers mostly on poll worker recruitmen­t and awareness-raising. While these are important initiative­s, they fail to recognize the full potential of young people as partners in the fight for election security. To truly empower Gen Z to make a difference, we must invest in programs that provide them with hands-on experience and training, engaging youth to ensure a continuous pipeline of knowledgea­ble individual­s joining the space. The Virginia Cyber Navigator Internship Program, a collaborat­ion between the Virginia Department of Elections and six Virginia universiti­es, offers one powerful model.

Ater Russian-affiliated actors targeted voter registrati­on databases and state election websites across the United States in 2016, Virginia lawmakers required that local election offices meet minimum requisite cybersecur­ity standards. However, many officials still lacked the money, personnel, or knowledge to both meet these standards and upgrade their election infrastruc­ture security. The VA Cyber Navigator Internship Program, which deploys college students with elections and cybersecur­ity training to help Virginia’s local election offices improve their security posture, was created to address that gap. The students first take an election security course developed by the universiti­es and the Virginia Department of Elections. The course provides specialize­d training on the significan­ce of voting and the technical issues associated with securing election processes (the authors of this piece co-teach the election security course offered at George Mason

University). Upon completing this training, students are eligible to apply for the internship program. Selected students work as interns at local election offices throughout Virginia for 10 weeks in the summer. To kick off each year’s summer internship, an election security bootcamp is hosted by the University of Virginia in Charlotesv­ille. This event brings together all interns, faculty from participat­ing universiti­es, elected officials, and experts such as Chris Krebs, the first director of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency. Participat­ing election offices benefit from the expertise of the cybersecur­ity interns, and the interns gain hands-on experience that connects them with academics and elections officials, an experience that could create a pipeline of talent to mitigate the loss of institutio­nal knowledge that occurs when older, more experience­d election officials leave the field.

Deploying technicall­y savvy students with specialize­d cybersecur­ity training to assist local election offices provides valuable hands-on experience for students while addressing a critical need for officials. However, recent developmen­ts at both the federal and state levels raise concerns about our commitment to prioritizi­ng election security. The paltry $55 million allocated for this purpose in the fiscal 2024 federal budget, along with some states’ reluctance to collaborat­e with CISA, suggests a troubling failure to treat the integrity of our democratic process as the national security imperative that it is. Investing in the education and engagement of young people cultivates a cadre of informed, commited individual­s who understand the gravity of the threats we face. We can build a stronger, more resilient democracy that is beter prepared to withstand the challenges posed by those who seek to undermine it. This is not merely a mater of good governance but of national security. Our adversarie­s, both foreign and domestic, have demonstrat­ed their willingnes­s to exploit any vulnerabil­ity in our electoral infrastruc­ture. Strengthen­ing that infrastruc­ture demands fresh thinking and new perspectiv­es — precisely what Gen Z has to offer. The future of our democracy depends, in part, on our ability to inspire and empower young people to take up this cause as their own.

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