The
internal intelligence bulletin will lay out specifics on cyber
threats from China and Russia, as well as potential physical
threats to election officials across the country, according to
the news outlet's report, which cited two people familiar with
the matter.
Republicans are aiming to win back control of the Senate and the
House of Representatives from Biden's fellow Democrats in the
midterm elections.
Representatives of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security
Agency (CISA) referred questions to the Department of Homeland
Security, which not immediately respond to a request for comment
on the report.
Domestic disinformation campaigns and homegrown threats to poll
workers are emerging as bigger concerns before the midterms, two
senior U.S. officials told Reuters last week.
"There is a lot of rhetoric about violence against poll
workers," said one of the U.S. officials. "So we have made it a
point ... to aggressively investigate all of those threats."
Russia and Iran, accused of meddling in past U.S. elections
using disinformation campaigns, are enmeshed in their own crises
- the Russian invasion of Ukraine and mass protests in Iran -
and have not yet been found to have targeted this election,
according to the U.S. cybersecurity and law enforcement
officials.
Election integrity has been a contentious issue in the United
States, particularly in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential
election. Republican former President Donald Trump continues to
make false claims that the election was stolen from him by
Democratic President Joe Biden through voting fraud.
Since 2020, there have been numerous reported incidents of poll
workers being threatened, harassed or assaulted by Trump
supporters, as detailed by Reuters. Opinion polls have shown
that a large majority of Republican voters believe Trump won
that election.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; editing by Kim Coghill and Stephen
Coates)
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