State leaders of both parties worried aloud yesterday about the security of America's election systems against possible cyberattacks ahead of this fall's midterm elections, aware that Russian agents targeted more than 20 states little more a year ago, and the Trump administration has taken a mostly hands-off approach to the continued interference.
US intelligence leaders report Russian hackers are already working to undermine this November's elections, which will decide the balance of power in Congress and in statehouses across the nation.
"The biggest concern is when you have a president and an administration that denies the problem and doesn't acknowledge the existence of the problem, it's hard to believe that they're going to be offering any real solutions or funding to make our system more secure."
Election security has been overshadowed by a near-constant string of chaos and controversy out of the White House over the last year. As most of the nation's governors gathered in Washington for a weekend conference, issues like gun violence, Trump's leadership and the economy dominated most hallway conversations.
The Trump administration has so far done little to help secure the mishmash of 10,000 local voting jurisdictions across the nation that mostly run on obsolete and imperfectly secured technology.
Russian agents targeted election systems in 21 statesim ahead of the 2016 general election, the Department of Homeland Security says, and separately launched a social media blitz aimed at inflaming social tensions and sowing confusion. The search for a solution has been shaped by partisan politics.
"There's obviously nothing more important than protecting the mechanism of democracy, and they've shown that they can at least meddle if not directly influence," Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam, who leads the Republican Governors Association, said of Russian hackers.
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