Were Voting Machines Actually Breached? DHS Would Rather Not Know
TalkingPointMemo
Pressure to examine voting machines used in the 2016 election grows daily as evidence builds that Russian hacking attacks were broader and deeper than previously known. And the Department of Homeland Security has a simple response:
No.
DHS officials from former secretary Jeh Johnson to acting Director of Cyber Division Samuel Liles may be adamant that machines were not affected, but the agency has not in fact opened up a single voting machine since November to check.
Asked about the decision, a DHS official told TPM: In a September 2016 Intelligence Assessment, DHS and our partners determined that there was no indication that adversaries were planning cyber activity that would change the outcome of the coming US election.
According to the most recent reports, 39 states were targeted by Russian hackers, and DHS has citedwithout providing detailsdomestic attacks in its own reports as well.
Although we continue to judge all newly available information, DHS has not fundamentally altered our prior assessments, the department told TPM.