"Eliminating the Election Assistance
Commission would pose a risky and irresponsible threat to our election
infrastructure."
Despite
an ongoing investigation into the hacking of voting systems in more than a dozen
states during the 2016 presidential election, the new budget blueprint
from House Republicans includes a provision to defund the Election Assistance Commission
(EAC), which the Wall Street Journal notes is "the
sole federal agency that exclusively works to ensure the voting process is
secure."
Since it was established in 2002,
the EAC has been under almost constant attack by the Republican Party. Earlier
this year, the House Administration Committee voted 6-3
along party lines to eliminate the agency entirely.
As The Atlantic's
Russell Berman noted in
February, "GOP attempts to eliminate the Election Assistance Commission
have passed out of committee but not made it to the House floor for a vote in
the last four years."
Because they have failed repeatedly
to eliminate the agency, Republicans now appear content to strip it of the
funds it needs to operate effectively.
- "Maintaining the national mail voter registration form."
- Establishing security standards for voting machines.
- Ensuring compliance with rules established by the Help America Vote Act, which was passed in the aftermath of the 2000 election.
- "Serving as a national clearinghouse of information on election administration."
Advocacy groups have warned that
defunding or eliminating the EAC would give a green light to hackers looking to
manipulate the electoral process.
"At a time when the vast
majority of our country's voting machines are outdated and in need of
replacement, and after an election in which international criminals already
attempted to hack our state voter registration systems, eliminating the EAC
would pose a risky and irresponsible threat to our election
infrastructure," the Brennan Center for Justice argued.
The GOP's latest attempt to defang
the EAC comes as it is "working with the Federal Bureau of Investigation
to examine an attack late last year on the agency's computer systems by a
Russian-speaking hacker," the Wall Street Journal noted
on Monday.
The proposed cuts are included in
the House GOP's far-reaching budget package, which also features
major cuts to Medicare and Social Security.
The Nation's Ari Berman has characterized GOP
attempts to eliminate the EAC as merely one element of the party's broad
assault on voting rights, which has been intensified by
the Trump administration.
"It's particularly ironic that
the Trump administration is preparing to launch a massive investigation into
nonexistent voter fraud based on the lie that millions
voted illegally while House Republicans are shutting down the agency
that is supposed to make sure America's elections are secure,"
Berman noted. "It's more proof
of how the GOP's real agenda is to make it harder to
vote."
Voting rights groups have argued
that now is the time to strengthen the EAC, and that any move to weaken it
could further deteriorate the integrity of American elections.
"In light of the many
challenges faced by our state and local election administrators and the serious
procedural problems that weaken voter access and participation," wrote 38
advocacy groups in a letter (pdf)
to the House in February, "we believe that this is a time to reaffirm our
commitment to voting rights and fair elections by strengthening the EAC and
providing it with the staff it requires to function effectively."