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US Calls Election Facilities Critical, Ups Cybersecurity

by Reuters

   WASHINGTON --

   The U.S. Department of Homeland Security Friday designated U.S.
   election infrastructure as critical, widening the options the
   government has to protect voting machines from cyberattacks.

   The decision, announced in a statement by DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson,
   followed a 2016 presidential campaign marred by concerns that hackers
   could disrupt the election.

   Voter registration systems targeted

   Also Friday, U.S. officials determined hackers targeted more than 20
   states' voter registration systems during the election, but there was
   no evidence tallies were altered when ballots were cast November 8.

   Elevating election systems to critical infrastructure puts it on par
   with other sectors eligible to receive prioritized cybersecurity
   assistance from DHS, including communication and transportation
   systems, the banking industry and the energy grid.

   Election infrastructure includes polling places, centralized vote
   tabulations locations, storage facilities and voter registration
   databases and voting machines, Johnson said.

   Many local officials oppose it

   Johnson said he and his staff had consulted with state and local
   election officials and that he was "aware that many of them are opposed
   to this designation." Some conservative states, such as Georgia,
   objected when the idea was floated during the presidential campaign,
   claiming elections have historically been overseen by local officials.

   The classification was not "a federal takeover, regulation, oversight
   or intrusion concerning elections in this country," Johnson said in a
   statement. "This designation does nothing to change the role state and
   local governments have in administering and running elections."