To ensure the integrity of the U.S. election system, which is handicapped by antiquated technology and under stress from foreign destabilization efforts, an expert panel of the National Academy of Sciences called for fundamental reforms.
The cautiously worded report calls for replacing rickety voting machines with more-secure voting machines that use paper ballots, and other measures such as a form of routine postelection audit aimed at spotting fraud.
The panel did not offer a price tag for its recommended overhaul. New York University's Brennan Center has estimated replacing aging voting machines over the next few years could cost well over $1 billion.
"The extraordinary threat from foreign actors has profound implications for the future of voting and obliges us to examine, re-examine seriously, both the conduct of elections in the United States and the role of the federal and state governments in securing our elections," Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University and co-chair of the panel, said in presenting the report Thursday.
The 156-page report — "Securing the Vote: Protecting American Democracy" — bemoans a rickety system compromised by insecure voting systems and software whose vulnerabilities were exposed more than a decade ago and which are too often managed by officials with little training in cybersecurity.
The principal recommendations of the study, commissioned in 2016 as foreign intrusion in U.S. elections became evident, reflect a consensus among election security experts that has met resistance from a number of states and Republican leaders in Congress.
In particular, the panel stressed it is not calling for a one-time fix, but a sustained effort over years that would include regular funding from Congress and greater transparency about attacks on voting systems and other irregularities.
Among its specific recommendations was a mainstay of election reformers: All elections should use human-readable paper ballots by 2020. Such systems are intended to assure voters that their vote was recorded accurately. They also create a lasting record of "voter intent" that can be used for reliable recounts, which may not be possible in systems that record votes electronically.
Roughly one in five U.S. voters cast ballots on such electronic machines in 2016. While some states have scrambled to replace them ahead of November's midterm elections, 13 continue to rely fully or partially on them.
The panel also calls for all states to adopt a type of postelection audit that employs statistical analysis of ballots prior to results certification. Such "risk-limiting" audits are designed to spot voting fraud or other problems. Currently only three states mandate them.
The report's release comes barely a week after a major piece of election security legislation was blocked in the Senate Rules Committee by GOP leaders. As originally written, the bipartisan Secure Elections Act would have satisfied the paper ballot and risk-limiting audit requirements. But those aspects have been watered down.
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