The U.S. Department of Homeland Security designated the nation’s election technology and systems as critical infrastructure, giving state election officials access to technical and policy aid from the agency. The move, announced Jan. 6, makes the election infrastructure in the United States part of the government-facilities critical infrastructure sector, one of the 16 sectors deemed crucial by the U.S. government. Other sectors include health care, energy and the defense industrial base. While some states have reportedly opposed the designation, the DHS assured election officials that states would still have full oversight and responsibility for running elections. … Election-security groups have long called for the infrastructure to be designated critical. Verified Voting, a group of voting experts, pushed for election systems to be deemed critical since 2013, Pamela Smith, president of Verified Voting, told eWEEK in an e-mail.“Voting systems should receive at least as much attention and care as other critical infrastructure systems do,” Smith said.
“The fact that all or nearly all of the 50 states as well as more than 30 local jurisdictions availed themselves of support from Department of Homeland Security this year in the run-up to the election makes it clear that cyber-security considerations in elections are serious.”
… While the change in status is a good initial step, Verified Voting’s Smith stressed that election officials should still require that audits of the all voting be conducted following an election, as a defense against fraud and machine error.
“Even where voting systems are recount-able and auditable— we don’t have robust audit requirements in place in at least half of those locations—we are not yet able to say authoritatively that our elections are secure,” she said. “We can do better.”
Full Article: DHS Adds Elections Machines, Systems to Critical Infrastructure List.