Since the 2020 election, lawmakers, advocates, and other public leaders have widely recognized that our democracy is under attack. Much of this has rightly focused on the wave of new voting restrictions passing in state legislatures across the country. But there has been a simultaneous and related increase in threats to our election infrastructure and election workers. Since 2020:
- Threats against election workers and offices have grown dramatically
- Increasing numbers of Americans have come to distrust the election system, fostering an environment that is ripe for the spread of further disinformation and misinformation
- A few current election officials and many more candidates for such positions in 2022 have themselves adopted far-right conspiracy theories about “rigged” elections, increasing the odds of insider attacks on our election infrastructure, including cyberattacks
On top of this, states must continue to guard against cyberattacks. Indeed, the FBI reported in March that unknown hackers targeted election officials in at least nine states with phishing attacks just last fall. In the lead-up to the 2022 election, and with the American intelligence community warning that heightened tensions with Russia over Ukraine may result in new attempts to “interfere with American elections,” these risks are likely to grow.
A recent Brennan Center survey of election officials bears out how serious many of these problems have become. Seventy-seven percent of local election officials nationwide say that threats against them have increased in recent years, and nearly one in three know of at least one election worker who left their job at least in part because of fear for their safety, increased threats, or intimidation. More than half of officials are concerned that some incoming colleagues might believe that widespread fraud occurred in 2020. Nearly two in three election officials say the spread of false information has made their jobs more dangerous.
The federal government has taken some small steps over the last year to address these new threats. For example, the Department of Justice (DOJ) launched an Election Threats Task Force to address the rise in threats against election workers, and it approved the use of federal criminal justice grants to protect state and local election officials from abuse.
But given the scale of these new threats, the government’s actions have been far from sufficient. Fortunately, it is not too late for federal agencies to take meaningful action to protect election workers and our infrastructure. We recommend the following:
- The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), an operational component of DHS, should direct resources and provide additional assistance to elections offices to secure election infrastructure, protect election workers, and fight election misinformation and disinformation.
- DOJ should increase outreach and cooperation with local election and public safety officials.
- The Election Assistance Commission (EAC) should build out a training hub for election officials, improve voting system testing and certification programs, and increase oversight of election vendors.
We discuss each of these important actions in greater detail below.