Cybersecurity head says there's no chance a foreign adversary can change
US election results
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[October 03, 2024]
By CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY and ALI SWENSON
WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly a month out from Election Day, the head of the
nation’s cybersecurity agency is forcefully reassuring Americans who
have been swept into the chaotic churn of election disinformation and
distrust that they will be able to feel confident in the outcome.
State and local election officials have made so much progress in
securing voting, ballot-counting and other election infrastructure that
the system is more robust than it has ever been, said Jen Easterly,
director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
As a result, she said, there is no way Russia, Iran or any other foreign
adversary will be able to alter the results.
“Malicious actors, even if they tried, could not have an impact at scale
such that there would be a material effect on the outcome of the
election,” Easterly told The Associated Press in an interview Wednesday.
Easterly's trust in the election process comes as intelligence officials
have warned of escalating efforts by foreign adversaries to influence
voters, deepen partisan divides and undermine faith in U.S. elections.
Her comments stand in contrast to the doubts millions of Americans,
especially Republicans, have held since the 2020 election when former
President Donald Trump refused to accept his loss. He has built on his
false claims of vote rigging since then, setting the stage to claim the
election has been stolen if he loses again this November.
Easterly touched on a range of election-related concerns — including
misinformation, her agency's role in interacting with social media
companies and ongoing threats to election workers — during the 40-minute
interview, which came as mail ballots are being sent out and some states
have started early in-person voting. She also said her agency is in
touch with election officials throughout the regions of the Southeast
that have been ravaged by Hurricane Helene, and praised those workers
for “displaying enormous and admirable resilience” as they try to ensure
that voters are able to cast their ballots despite the devastation.
Recognizing that many Americans’ confidence in elections “has been
shaken,” Easterly emphasized how prepared election officials are for
emergencies, simple mistakes and attacks — and how motivated they are to
protect Americans’ votes.
Election officials have worked in recent years to boost cybersecurity
defenses around the nation’s voting systems, implementing procedures
ranging from access controls to regular testing to identify potential
vulnerabilities. Officials also test voting equipment before every
election to ensure it works properly.
Easterly pointed to layers of security and transparency — such as the
paper record of votes in more than 97% of voting jurisdictions — as
protections that will help verify the results.
“Things will go wrong. There could be another storm. There could be a
ransomware attack, a distributed denial of service attack,” she said.
“These disruptions will create effects, but they will not impact the
ability and the votes being cast or those votes being counted.”
U.S. officials have spent recent months warning through criminal
charges, sanctions and public advisories that foreign adversaries are
ramping up their efforts to influence voters in the race for the White
House.
The Biden administration last month seized more than two dozen
Kremlin-run fake websites and charged two Russian state media employees
in a scheme to covertly fund right-wing influencers. Last week, three
Iranian operatives were charged with hacking Trump’s campaign.
Intelligence agencies and tech companies have tracked both Russian and
Iranian actors using fake websites and social media profiles to spread
misinformation, stoke division and potentially sway American voters.
Iran and Russia have sought to influence past U.S. elections through
online disinformation and hacking. Easterly noted that China also was
“very interested” in influencing the 2024 election.
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Director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security
Agency (CISA) Jen Easterly speaks to The Associated Press in
Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
Beyond the influence campaigns, she said her agency had not detected
any activity targeting election systems.
“We have not seen specific cyber activity designed to interfere with
actual election infrastructure or processes,” Easterly said.
The prevalence of election misinformation has become a widespread
concern. One consequence is what Easterly described as a troubling
uptick in physical threats against election officials of both
parties and, in some cases, their families, often based on false
claims about the 2020 election. She called it “corrosive” to
democracy and said it's something the public needs to collectively
fight.
“Those election officials, they are not faceless bureaucrats,”
Easterly said. “They’re folks we see in the community every single
day. And they’re not doing this for pay. They’re not doing it for
glory. They are doing it because they believe in the process of
democracy.”
Many secretaries of state and some larger local election offices
have established specific efforts to combat the misinformation.
U.S. Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, a Democrat who leads the Senate
Intelligence Committee, last week wrote a letter to Easterly that
urged the agency to take further steps against election
misinformation and disinformation, including coordinating with
social media platforms to combat false claims.
In the interview, Easterly acknowledged “a very convoluted, very
confusing information environment,” and said her agency works with
election officials to promote accurate information. However, she
also made it clear that her agency does not monitor social media
sites or attempt to moderate their content.
“That is not our role,” she said.
On the heels of Trump's running mate, Sen. JD Vance, accusing the
federal government of “censorship” in Tuesday night's debate between
the vice presidential candidates, Easterly strongly defended her
agency, known as CISA.
“CISA does not censor, has never censored,” she said. “And
allegations against CISA are riddled with factual inaccuracies.”
CISA, along with other federal agencies, was part of a lawsuit filed
by Republican-led states claiming the federal government had applied
“unrelenting pressure” to coerce changes in online content on social
media platforms. In a 6-3 vote, the U.S. Supreme Court said the
states did not have a legal right to sue.
Easterly encouraged voters who question how elections are run to
contact their local election office and even volunteer to serve as
poll workers so they understand the process and the safeguards
already in place. She also warned that foreign adversaries almost
certainly will seek to take advantage of the vote-counting process
after Election Day as a way to undermine confidence in the results.
She urged voters to be patient, emphasizing that it could take
several days for a presidential winner to be determined.
“We need to come together as Americans to protect and preserve what
is most precious,” she said. “And that is the foundation of our
democracy — fair, free, safe and secure elections.”
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