The Commercial Appeal

Experts: ’24 vote faces foreign cyberthrea­ts

Decentrali­zed election system called vulnerable

- Ayanna Alexander

WASHINGTON – Top state election and cybersecur­ity officials on Thursday warned about threats posed by Russia and other foreign adversarie­s ahead of the 2024 elections, noting that America’s decentrali­zed system of thousands of local voting jurisdicti­ons creates a particular vulnerabil­ity.

Russia and Iran have meddled in previous elections, including attempts to tap into internet-connected electronic voter databases. Distracted by war and protests, neither country appeared to disrupt last year’s midterm elections, but security officials said they expect U.S. foes to be more active as the next presidenti­al election season draws near. The first primaries are less than a year away.

Jen Easterly, director of the federal Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, referenced Russia’s attack on Ukraine and the U.s.-led effort to supply weapons and other aid to the besieged country as a possible motivator. She said the agency was “very concerned about potential retaliatio­n from Russia of our critical infrastruc­ture.”

She also mentioned China as a possible source of election interferen­ce, especially as the relationsh­ip between the two countries has deteriorat­ed, mostly recently over the suspected spy balloon that floated across the country before being shot down by a U.S. fighter jet.

“We’ve not seen anything here, but I’d like to end that with the word – yet,” said Easterly, speaking during the annual gathering of the National Associadec­ided

tion of Secretarie­s of State.

Of particular concern is the decentrali­zed nature of America’s election system. There are some 10,000 local voting jurisdicti­ons throughout the U.S., including counties and townships, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Not all of those have funding for new equipment, proper staffing or updated training of election workers. Easterly said it was a priority to get money and expertise to what she termed “targetrich, cyber-poor” entities.

Meagan Wolfe, administra­tor of the Wisconsin Elections Commission and president of the National Associatio­n of State Election Directors, said her state has about 1,850 local officials running elections, which makes it difficult to disburse federal money in a way that is effective over the long term. Wisconsin is a perennial swing state, where four of the past six presidenti­al races have been

by less than a percentage point and election conspiraci­es have found fertile ground since the 2020 election.

Stephen Spaulding, policy director for the U.S. Senate Committee on Rules & Administra­tion, said the committee’s chairwoman, Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar, is trying to obtain more election funding after an attempt late last year fizzled. Congress allocated $75 million in election security grants to states, but that was far short of what many state and local officials had requested.

“More than $75 million from last year’s omnibus is clearly needed, in our view,” Spaulding said. “We have repeatedly heard about how sustainabl­e funding ensures our elections continue to run smoothly, facilitate predictabi­lity and planning, and we’re striving to work on a bipartisan basis to get that done.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? Christy Mccormick, vice chair of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, speaks as the National Associatio­n of Secretarie­s of State meets in Washington Thursday. At left is EAC Commission­er Ben Hovland.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP Christy Mccormick, vice chair of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, speaks as the National Associatio­n of Secretarie­s of State meets in Washington Thursday. At left is EAC Commission­er Ben Hovland.

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