Cyber Attack | Data Breach

Published on May 17th, 2019 📆 | 7753 Views ⚑

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Senate unlikely to vote on election security despite risk


iSpeech

Despite evidence that Russia launched an assault on the 2016
election – most recently, the FBI briefed Florida Gov. Rick DeSantis on election
database hacks
in two of the state’s counties – Sen. Mitch McConnell has
nixed taking up election security legislation in the Senate.

“At this point I don’t see any likelihood that those bills would
get to the floor if we mark them up,” Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., said in response
to a query by Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., during a Senate Rules
Committee hearing
that heard testimony from members of the Election Assistance Commission (EAC).

“I
think the majority leader is of the view that this debate reaches no conclusion,”
Blunt explained, fingering the House’s recently passed H.R. 1, For the People
Act 2019, as a culprit.

“Frankly, I think the extreme nature of H.R. 1 from the House
makes it even less likely we are going to have that debate,” Blunt said.

McConnell has said he wouldn’t bring H.R. 1, which proposes
comprehensive election reform, to a vote in the Senate despite a warning
recently at the Council on Foreign Relations from FBI Director Christopher Wray
that 2018 was “just kind of a dress
rehearsal for the big show in 2020.”





Noting the ramped-up efforts of the CIA and other government
agencies to combat nation-state attacks on the 2020 election, Durbin said that
by not being able to bring a bill to the Senate floor for debate “doesn’t speak
very well of us.” 

During the hearing, EAC Chairwoman Christy McCormick contended
that budget cuts that pared staff down by more than half from 49 to 22 have
left the committee without the resources to effectively protect the elections.

“The
EAC does not have full time employees devoted to these new components of
providing election security support,” McCormick said. “Without additional
resources, we simply will not be able to provide the breadth of support
election officials need and expect from the EAC to ensure secure, accessible,
and efficient elections.” 

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