U.S. Democrats push $1 billion bill for
election security
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[February 15, 2018]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Congressional
Democrats introduced legislation on Wednesday that would provide more
than $1 billion to boost cyber security of U.S. voting systems, and Vice
President Mike Pence defended the administration's efforts to protect
polls from hackers.
The measure followed warnings on Tuesday from U.S. intelligence
officials that midterm races in November are likely to see renewed
meddling from Russia and possibly other foreign adversaries.
"We cannot let the Russians laugh about and take joy in the success they
had in the last election," Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader in the
House of Representatives, told a news conference. "Their goal is to
undermine democracy."
Lawmakers have introduced several bills, some with bipartisan support,
to bolster election security since the 2016 polls in which Republican
Donald Trump was elected president. None have become law.
The new bill is the most comprehensive to date and is aimed at
bolstering protection for the midterms and subsequent elections. It has
no Republican co-sponsors in the House, which the party controls, and is
therefore unlikely to succeed.
Pence, speaking at an event hosted by the online news site Axios, said
Americans could trust the 2016 election results and that it was an
"ongoing effort" of Trump's administration to protect election
infrastructure.
He also incorrectly said it was the "universal conclusion" among
intelligence agencies that Moscow's efforts had no impact on the 2016
election outcome.
The agencies said in a January 2017 report that no assessment was made
about the impact of Russian meddling but that Russia used hacking and
propaganda to try to tilt the election in Trump's favor. Russian
President Vladimir Putin has denied this.
A Pence representative did not respond immediately to a request to
clarify the discrepancy between Pence's comments and the intelligence
assessment.
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U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi holds her weekly news
conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., January 18,
2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis
The Democrats' Election Security Act would allocate $1 billion in
grants, overseen by the U.S. Election Commission, this year to help
states buy voting machines that incorporate backup paper ballots,
hire security staff and conduct risk assessments.
It would provide up to an additional $175 million in 2019, 2021,
2023 and 2025, for a total of about $1.75 billion.
The measure would create a $20 million grant program for states to
perform post-election audits. It would also require the Department
of Homeland Security to expedite security clearances for state
election officials and direct the president to develop a strategy to
guard U.S. institutions, including elections, from cyber attacks and
influence operations.
The department said last year 21 states had experienced initial
probing of their systems from Russian hackers and a small number of
networks were compromised.
Virtually all 50 states have taken steps since the 2016 election to
purchase more secure equipment, expand the use of paper ballots,
improve cyber training or seek federal assistance, according to
groups that track election security.
However, Congress has not provided more money or support and
lawmakers have failed to allocate $400 million in leftover election
improvement funds pledged 16 years ago.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz; additional reporting by Roberta Rampton;
Editing by Jim Finkle, Ian Simpson and Paul Tait)
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