As things stand, there is no reason to believe the Iowa Democratic Party’s presidential caucus fiasco had anything to do with a “hack” or a nefarious outside actor. But as the political world marvels at the mess in the Hawkeye State, some are turning their attention to worst-case election scenarios.
Take Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), for example, who published this tweet a few hours ago.
Think #IowaCaucus meltdown is bad? Imagine very close Presidential election.
Russian or Chinese hackers tamper with preliminary reporting system in key counties.
When the official results begin to be tabulated it shows a different winner than the preliminary results online.
This is, to be sure, a scary scenario for Americans to “imagine,” and I’m glad to see the Florida Republican draw attention to the possible vulnerabilities to our system of elections and those who might target it.
There is, however, just one nagging problem: Rubio’s missive suggests the Senate should take up new measures to improve domestic election security, and the senator’s party seems to disagree.
Let’s circle back to our earlier coverage on this. It was just last summer when Rubio partnered with Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) on an election-security proposal called the Defending Elections from Threats by Establishing Redlines (DETER Act). The idea was pretty straightforward: if U.S. intelligence agencies were to determine that Russia interfered in another federal election, new sanctions would kick in targeting Russia’s finance, defense and energy sectors.
The point, obviously, would be to create a disincentive, letting the Kremlin know in advance that Russia would face significant economic consequences if Moscow once again attacked our democratic institutions.
The bill picked up a bipartisan group of co-sponsors, and it seemed like the sort of proposal that might even have a chance in the Republican-led Senate. Those hopes were dashed in December when the GOP balked: Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) insisted the bipartisan legislation had been “designed” to be bad for Donald Trump, and must, therefore, be defeated.









