DHS holds classified briefings for state elections officials
Connecting state and local government leaders
The meetings focused on risks states' election infrastructure from foreign adversaries as well as threat mitigation efforts.
State election officials who were in Washington, D.C., for a conference were briefed on election systems cybersecurity by intelligence community officials, the Department of Homeland Security, and members of law enforcement.
A DHS account of the classified briefings for members of the National Association of State Election Directors and the National Association for Secretaries of State (NASS) said they "focused on increasing awareness of foreign adversary intent and capabilities against the states' election infrastructure, as well as a discussion of threat mitigation efforts."
In addition to talking with secretaries from all 50 states, DHS also briefed the newly formed, industry-centered Sector Coordinating Council for the Election Infrastructure Subsector and met with the Government Coordinating Council for the Election Infrastructure Subsector that formed last October in the wake of mounting evidence of Russian interference in the 2016 elections. NASS Director of Communications Maria Dill Benson told GCN's sibling site FCW in a Feb. 20 email that her organization's "top priority … is to improve communication between DHS and state and local election officials. We see all of these meetings and briefings as a positive step forward."
State election officials prize their independence from the federal government, and some have at times bristled at calls for more federal involvement in overseeing the cybersecurity of state and local election systems.
At last year's NASS winter meeting, for instance, the group's current president, Connecticut Secretary of State Denise Merrill, questioned the need for DHS' then-recently-announced designation of election infrastructure as critical infrastructure. At that meeting, Merrill called the designation "a broad new role for the federal government" and said she wanted written guidance from the agency on what the designation meant specifically.
The incoming NASS president, Vermont Secretary of State Jim Condos, said he thought DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen was downplaying threats foreign powers, specifically Russia, posed to the integrity of U.S. elections.
That independent streak apparently continued in the group's latest meetings. The Huffington Post reported that NASS' president-elect Condos questioned Nielsen about President Donald Trump's continued downplaying of Russian interference in the 2016 election, according to an account in the Huffington Post. Condos' office didn't respond to FCW's request for comment.
Separately, the Justice Department announced the creation of a Cyber-Digital Task Force to examine how to enhance and improve law enforcement in the digital realm. The memo announcing the task force mentions a host of cybersecurity threats, including "efforts to interfere with our elections."
A report from the task force is due June 30.