National: Former Election Security Official Says It Will Take ‘Years’ To Undo Disinformation | Pam Fessler/NPR
One of the top federal officials responsible for securing the nation’s elections is speaking out days after leaving his job with the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. Matthew Masterson was a senior cybersecurity adviser at CISA, primarily responsible for elections, and his departure comes amid persistent, but baseless, claims that the 2020 elections were riddled with fraud. Many of those have come from President Trump, who last month fired Masterson’s former boss, Christopher Krebs, after Krebs joined others in calling the 2020 election the “most secure in American history.” Trump’s allegations have been widely disputed by election experts and numerous courts, where his campaign has tried unsuccessfully to overturn the election results. In his first interview since leaving his job, Masterson told NPR that the biggest challenge for the nation now is restoring public faith in the voting process. Recent polls have shown that a large segment of the electorate, including a majority of Republicans, does not trust that this year’s results were legitimate. Masterson believes, on the contrary, that the 2020 vote was “as smooth a presidential election as I’ve ever seen.” He noted recent improvements in election security and transparency, including expanded use of paper ballots and audits, as well as streaming live video of vote counts. “Yet we’re still beating back disinformation and claims of technical manipulation that just simply aren’t true,” he said. “So we’ve got to continue to explore how to offer voters more and more evidence, in a transparent fashion, to reassure them that their vote was counted as cast.”
Full Article: First Interview With Matthew Masterson, Former CISA Election Security Official : NPR