Warren offers plan to secure elections

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a presidential candidate, released a plan Tuesday to secure elections against cyber threats and foreign interference, as well as to end voting suppression.

Warren’s plan, which was published in an article in Medium, would have the federal government replace every voting machine in the nation with “state-of-the-art equipment,” specifically machines that will allow for hand-marked, voter-verified paper ballots.

Uniform ballots across all election jurisdictions would also be required as well in order to prevent “hanging chad” issues — referring to the 2000 presidential election recount in Florida when a confusing ballot became the subject of intense scrutiny.

“Our elections should be as secure as Fort Knox,” Warren wrote. “But instead, they’re less secure than your Amazon account.”

The plan comes just months after special counsel Robert Mueller spelled out how Russia interfered in the 2016 election.

Warren’s plan also includes replacing the current Election Assistance Commission with the “Secure Democracy Administration,” an agency that would be tasked with managing election cybersecurity and developing security procedures for election administrators.

The proposals would likely entail a large investment from the federal government in state elections, with Warren writing that “the federal government will pay the entirety of a state’s election administration costs, as long as the state meets federal standards in its state and local elections and works to make voting more convenient.”

Beyond securing the election, Warren’s plan also calls for creating “binding federal standards for federal elections” that would mandate automatic voter registration and same-day registration, along with banning vote roll purges and making Election Day a national holiday.

Further, Warren advocates for an end to gerrymandering, with states required to use “independent redistricting commissions” that would be tasked with drawing congressional districts in a fair way.

“Enough is enough,” Warren wrote. “It is time to make high-quality voting in the greatest democracy in the world easy, convenient, and professional. It’s time to secure our elections from all threats, foreign and domestic. It’s time to address election security, administration problems, and voter suppression.”