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Louisiana Secretary of State Wants to Remove 'Critical Infrastructure' Label from Election Systems

The designation allows voter registration rolls, balloting and other parts of the election system to receive priority cybersecurity assistance from the federal government.

(TNS) — Louisiana Secretary of State Tom Schedler asked Tuesday President-elect Donald Trump to undo a recent federal decision that designates elections systems in all 50 states as “critical infrastructure.”

U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson on Jan. 6 said in a press release that the designation allows voter registration rolls, balloting and other parts of the election system to receive priority cybersecurity assistance.

The federal government has 16 critical infrastructure sectors, including dams, government facilities and nuclear reactors. The designation allows those sectors to work with federal authorities on a variety activities, such as, risk assessments.

Johnson acknowledged that many state and local election officials “are opposed to this designation.” But, he added, the designation does not mean a federal takeover, regulation, oversight or intrusion concerning elections.

Schedler said in a prepared statement that during a conference call with elections officials around the country, Johnson could not say why such a formal designation was immediately necessary.

Over the summer, Arizona and Illinois reported efforts to infiltrate their voter registration systems. No data was manipulated and the systems targeted had nothing to do with vote casting or counting.

The FBI reported to Congress that a variety of “scanning activities” — early indications of computer hacking — was found in as many as 20 states. Johnson, at the time, encouraged states to secure their election systems and ensure that electronic voting machines were not connected to the internet.

Louisiana already had implemented all of the recommendations made by Johnson’s agency, Schedler said. He questioned the need to make the designation during the final weeks of the Obama administration.

He asked Trump to rescind the designation after taking office on Friday.

“When it comes to election integrity, I am not going to let the federal government have the keys to our secured election system unless they can better articulate their intentions,” Schedler said, adding that it was intrusion into state’s rights and a step towards nationalizing elections.

©2017 The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La. Visit The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La. at www.theadvocate.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.