Elections are a hallmark of democracy, making them prime targets for foreign interference. Find ASD’s work on the foreign threats to election infrastructure and electoral processes, as well as steps democracies can take to secure them, on this page.
Maurice Turner Introduces USC’s Election Security Podcast
Listen to USC Election Cybersecurity Executive Director, Adam Clayton Powell, III and Cybersecurity Fellow, Alliance for Securing Democracy, German Marshall Fund of the United States, and USC Election Security Analyst, Maurice Turner, introduce USC [...]
Four Things in H.R. 1 That Defend Against Foreign Interference
On March 3, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 1: For the People Act of 2021, advancing to the Senate what would be the most comprehensive overhaul of U.S. election law in the past half a century. The 791-page bill includes important measures [...]
David Levine in GW International Law and Policy Brief: Trust But Verify: Increasing Confidence in Democratic Elections
This article was originally published on GW International Law and Policy Brief's website. Election observers help ensure that elections are conducted in a democratic manner, as recognized by international law. Paragraph 8 of the 1990 Organization f [...]
Bret Schafer on Information Warfare and How Social Media Disrupts Democracy on the Jist
Media and Digital Disinformation Fellow Bret Schafer joined Josh Hamilton on The Jist. Bret and Josh first spoke three to discuss the weaponization of information and the threat to democracy. Now, three years later, things have unfortunately not gott [...]
Jessica Brandt and Josh Rudolph in Just Security: Outlaw Participation in Foreign Attacks on U.S. Elections
Nobody has suffered serious legal consequences for actively welcoming—some say aiding and abetting—Russian interference in the 2016 and 2020 elections, or for having asked the presidents of Ukraine and China to similarly interfere. One reason for th [...]
David Levine and William Adler in NY Daily News: We Need A Presidential Commission on Elections
ASD’s Elections Integrity Fellow David Levine and the Center for Democracy and Technology's Senior Technologist in Elections and Democracy William T. Adler argue that President Biden should establish a bipartisan presidential commission to identify [...]
Biden Urged To Create Commission on Trust in Democracy: Trusting the Vote Covered in The Fulcrum
David Levine and William T. Adler’s report Trusting the Vote: Establishing a Presidential Commission on Election Resilience and Trust is highlighted in The Fulcrum. At a time when democracy feels most fragile, in the wake of a divisive election fu [...]
White House Must Act Now to Boost Trust in Elections, Experts Say: Trusting the Vote Covered in CyberScoop
David Levine and William T. Adler's report Trusting the Vote: Establishing a Presidential Commission on Election Resilience and Trust is featured in CyberScoop. There’s a brief window for the Biden administration to boost Americans’ trust in the vo [...]
Trusting the Vote Covered in the Washington Post
Tonya Riley gives an exclusive first look at David Levine and William T. Adler's report, Trusting the Vote: Establishing a Presidential Commission on Election Resilience and Trust, in The Washington Post's Cyber 202. After a volatile election cycl [...]
Trusting the Vote: Establishing a Presidential Commission on Election Resilience and Trust
ASD’s Elections Integrity Fellow David Levine and the Center for Democracy and Technology's Senior Technologist in Elections and Democracy William T. Adler urge President Biden to establish a bipartisan presidential commission to recommend ways to [...]
Spies and Money: Legal Defenses Against Foreign Interference in Political Campaigns
Executive Summary In recent years, U.S. government officials have normalized a damaging notion: that soliciting or participating in foreign interference in a U.S. election will not be prosecuted. Foreign governments from Beijing to Moscow and else [...]
GMF’s What to Watch in 2021
This article was originally published on GMF's blog on January 8, 2021. As the world watched with growing disbelief, the end of 2020 and the start of 2021 merged into a long transition as Donald Trump’s refusal to concede that he had lost last Nove [...]