Pressure builds to improve election cybersecurity

Congressional efforts to secure election systems from cyberattacks are picking up steam with lawmakers under pressure to prevent hacks in the 2018 midterms.

After the revelation that Russia tried to probe election systems in 21 states in the 2016 election, security experts, state officials and others demanded federal action to help states upgrade outdated voting machines and bolster security around voter registration databases.

Last week, a bipartisan coalition of six senators introduced the Secure Elections Act, which includes a measure authorizing grants for states to upgrade outdated voting technology and shore up their digital security.

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“It is imperative that we strengthen our election systems and give the states the tools they need to protect themselves and the integrity of voters against the possibility of foreign interference,” Sen. James LankfordJames Paul LankfordTim Scott to introduce GOP police reform bill next week Senate GOP shifts on police reform McConnell taps Tim Scott to assemble GOP police reform legislation MORE (R-Okla.), a Senate Intelligence Committee member, said when unveiling the bill.

Moscow’s targeting of state systems, including breaching voter registration databases in Arizona and Illinois, was part of a broader effort to meddle in the election. It led the Obama administration to designate election systems as critical infrastructure in its waning days.

The issue of Russian interference has generated significant attention in Washington over the past year, but little successful legislative action.

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But the bill introduced by Sens. Lankford, Amy KlobucharAmy KlobucharHillicon Valley: Biden calls on Facebook to change political speech rules | Dems demand hearings after Georgia election chaos | Microsoft stops selling facial recognition tech to police Democrats demand Republican leaders examine election challenges after Georgia voting chaos Harris grapples with defund the police movement amid veep talk MORE (D-Minn.) and others is evidence of a growing effort to pass legislation specifically addressing voting infrastructure cybersecurity.

The bill comes as state officials are clamoring for swifter action ahead of the 2018 midterms.

“When we had instances last year all over the country related to people trying to get into other peoples’ data and voter files – why are we waiting for something bad to happen to start doing something about it?” said Arizona Secretary of State Michele Reagan (R).

“Let’s be honest, it’s not going to happen if we all stay quiet about it,” Reagan added.

Advocacy groups are lining up in support of the bill. They hail it as a long-awaited, multifaceted approach that both incentivizes states to bolster voting system cybersecurity and provides resources to replace insecure election technology.

“There needs to be more urgency,” said Rudy Mehrbani, a senior counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice, a left-leaning public policy institute that supports the bill. “There [are] only a limited number of months left between now and the 2018 elections.”

The concerns surrounding election infrastructure cybersecurity are two-pronged.

Officials maintain that Russia did not target voting machines, which are not connected to the internet. Many say the decentralized nature of the U.S. voting system makes it difficult for hackers to actually change a result.

Still, some security experts say that voting technologies are vulnerable to hacking and have called for election officials to swap out paperless direct-recording electronic voting machines for systems that yield an auditable paper ballot, to increase confidence.

Currently, five states still rely completely on paperless digital machines to tally votes, while several more have mixed infrastructure with some localities using the technology.

“In every single case where a U.S. voting machine has been tested in the laboratory and given rigorous security scrutiny, it has been found to have vulnerabilities that would allow a sophisticated adversary to manipulate votes,” said J. Alex Halderman, a University of Michigan computer science professor.

“All we need to do is make sure we have a physical safeguard, a physical fallback mechanism.”

Earlier this year, Virginia officials raced to phase out paperless machines less than two months before the November gubernatorial election, after security experts demonstrated the ease with which machines could be hacked at the DEFCON cybersecurity conference in Las Vegas over the summer.

Some have also raised concerns about the possibility of hackers targeting voter registration databases to change voter data — creating chaos on election day.

The Department of Homeland Security has stepped up to provide cyber hygiene testing and other services to states that request help as part of the critical infrastructure services, though some states face up to nine-month wait times for vulnerability screenings, officials told Politico.

Still, state officials, whose own legislatures are strapped for cash, contend that, without additional resources, election officials will fall short of securing their systems from cyber threats.

In mid-December, the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) pressed Congress to appropriate the remaining $396 million from the 2002 Help America Vote Act so states can update aging election systems to enhance security.

“We’re already behind the eight ball here and we need Congress to step up and move quickly,” said Vermont Secretary of State Jim Condos (D), the incoming president of NASS.

Still, legislating the issue at the federal level could prove tricky. Some state officials are wary of federal money coming with too many strings attached.

“Is the federal government then going to ask for oversight? Are they going to mandate we or do or don’t do certain things?” Reagan reflected. “If there are some strings, so be it — but what would that be? But we’re eager to have that conversation.”

The Secure Elections Act, for example, would offer grants to states to implement cybersecurity guidelines developed by an independent advisory panel.

At the same time, it is constructed to keep state officials happy by affirming their lead on administering federal elections. It also aims to quicken and improve information sharing between the Department of Homeland Security and relevant election officials, which has been a source of tension between states and federal officials over the past year.

Lawmakers had a long road to get to the bill.

The U.S. intelligence community released its Russian interference assessment in January, saying that Moscow aimed to sow discord, damage Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonWhite House accuses Biden of pushing ‘conspiracy theories’ with Trump election claim Biden courts younger voters — who have been a weakness Trayvon Martin’s mother Sybrina Fulton qualifies to run for county commissioner in Florida MORE, and help elect President TrumpDonald John TrumpSenate advances public lands bill in late-night vote Warren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases Esper orders ‘After Action Review’ of National Guard’s role in protests MORE.

For several months, the conversation in the media and Washington has largely focused on the special counsel investigation into whether Trump campaign associates coordinated with Moscow.

As Russian hacking efforts in the states came into full focus over the summer, some lawmakers began to seek legislative solutions to the problem.

Sens. Klobuchar and Lindsey GrahamLindsey Olin GrahamHillicon Valley: Biden calls on Facebook to change political speech rules | Dems demand hearings after Georgia election chaos | Microsoft stops selling facial recognition tech to police OVERNIGHT DEFENSE: Joint Chiefs chairman says he regrets participating in Trump photo-op | GOP senators back Joint Chiefs chairman who voiced regret over Trump photo-op | Senate panel approves 0B defense policy bill GOP senators back Joint Chiefs chairman who voiced regret over Trump photo-op MORE (R-S.C.) introduced an unsuccessful amendment to the annual defense policy bill to develop “best practices” for state election cybersecurity and provide grants to states to bolster security and update systems. Both lawmakers have signed on to support the latest legislation.

Less than a year out from the 2018 midterms, these efforts have yet to prove fruitful, though, spawning broad frustration.

Michael Chertoff, who served as Homeland Security Secretary under former President George W. Bush, described lawmakers’ and election officials’ “lackadaisical response” to election cyber risks as “both staggering and distressing” in a September Wall Street Journal op-ed. Chertoff pushed for federal cybersecurity standards for election technology.

Broadly, the efforts by the Republican-led Congress to respond to Russian interference have attracted criticism. Former acting CIA Director Michael Morell and former GOP Rep. Mike RogersMichael (Mike) Dennis RogersThe Hill’s Morning Report – Capitol Hill weighs action on racial justice as protests carry on Bottom line Officials warn Chinese hackers targeting groups developing coronavirus treatments MORE (Mich.) wrote in The Washington Post this week that, despite Congress levying additional sanctions against Moscow this summer, “the United States has failed to establish deterrence in the aftermath of Russia’s interference.”

Some worry it might be too late for any legislation to help prevent hacking efforts targeting states in 2018.

“Now we’re on the verge of another federal election,” said Virginia Department of Elections Commissioner Edgardo Cortés.

“At this point, additional resources from Congress — it’s going to be difficult to make them useful in time to have an impact on 2018.”

Outrage as White House Set to 'Roll Out Red Carpet' for Murderer Duterte

Just a few weeks after he congratulated autocratic Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on a controversial referendum win, U.S. President Donald Trump invited Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte—who has presided over a violent “war on the poor” in his country and is the subject of a mass murder complaint before the International Criminal Court (ICC)—to the White House.

A statement from the White House Press Office said the two leaders spoke on Saturday but gave no indication of when the visit might occur. 

Since his inauguration in June 2016, Duterte has overseen an anti-drug campaign dubbed “Operation Double Barrel” that, according to Human Rights Watch, “has targeted suspected drug dealers and users ostensibly for arrest but in practice has been a campaign of extrajudicial execution in impoverished areas of Manila and other urban areas.”

The rights group said last month that “Duterte’s outspoken endorsement of the campaign implicates him and other senior officials in possible incitement to violence, instigation of murder, and in command responsibility for crimes against humanity.”

Amnesty International also declared earlier this year that “[u]nder President Duterte’s rule, the national police are breaking laws they are supposed to uphold while profiting from the murder of impoverished people the government was supposed to uplift. The same streets Duterte vowed to rid of crime are now filled with bodies of people illegally killed by his own police.”

Manila resident Miguel Syjuco, an author and professor, wrote last August:

Duterte has in fact admitted to personally killing criminal suspects as mayor of Davao. 

But such wrongdoing appears not to faze the Trump administration, which is defending its decision to host Duterte at the White House. When pressed on the subject on Sunday, Trump’s chief of staff Reince Priebus said the invitation was a sign that “the issues facing us, developing out of North Korea, are so serious that we need a cooperation at some level from as many partners in the area as possible.”

The Huffington Post reported:

Watch the interaction with Priebus below:

Phelim Kine, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, pushed back against the White House’s position. “The facts of Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte’s abusive war on drugs are not that he’s ‘fighting hard to rid [his] country of drugs,’ but that he’s pursuing a murderous war against the poor that has resulted in the brutally violent deaths of thousands of Filipinos,” Kine said Sunday. 

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“Countries with close bilateral ties to the Philippines, particularly the United States, have an obligation to urge accountability for the victims,” he continued, “rather than roll out the red carpet for official state visits by its mastermind.”

Kine and others offered more thoughts on Twitter:

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Hundreds Gather at Trump Golf Course and Spell It Out: 'Resist!'

With the national anti-Trump resistance movement continuing its fight against the White House and Republican agendas on all fronts, 200 members of a local Indivisible group in California on Saturday took their message to the  Trump National Golf Course in the town of Rancho Palos Verdes and aimed it at the sky: Resist!

With bodies folded against one another on a green near the course’s clubhouse, the aerial shots are not likely to be included in the country club’s brochure anytime soon.

Peter Warren, a member of Indivisible San Pedro, explained to local news channel CBS2 that the protest was calling for a special prosecutor to begin an independent probe into whether there was Russian influence on the 2016 presidential election and if there was collusion of any kind with the Trump campaign or people affiliated with it.

Thousands of local Indivisible groups have popped up around the country since Trump took over the White House in January. Spawned by former legislative aides in Washington, D.C. who wrote the “Indivisible Guide” and posted it online, the groups have formed one of the main arteries for grassroots resistance against both Trump and the Republican lawmakers who now control both the House of Representatives and the Senate.

As The Hill noted, the San Pedro group’s Facebook describes them as “a group of concerned citizens that realize the Trump administration’s agenda will take America backwards, and must be stopped.”

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#StopTrumpCare Call-In Day Fights Republican Secrecy

In the wake of news that Senate Republicans are planning to send their version of Trumpcare to the Congressional Budget Office without releasing it to the public, Indivisible is urging people in every state to ramp up the pressure on their elected officials Wednesday, which the group has declared “National # Call-In Day.”

“McConnell and Republican Senators intend to submit their secret healthcare bill to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) without any committee hearings, discussions, bipartisan debate, or public comments,” Indivisible noted. “We CAN do something about this: demand Democratic Senators grind Senate business to a halt by withholding consent until Trumpcare gets a hearing, and urge Republican Senators to push their colleagues to draft their healthcare replacement openly and publicly.”

Given the shooting that took place in Virginia on Wednesday, the group urged everyone to “be kind and understanding with staffers” during their calls. “Many will still be grappling with today’s tragic events.”

Indivisible’s website offers a variety of tools—including a sample call script and a step-by-step strategy—for those looking to fight back against the GOP’s healthcare efforts, which have in the past yielded plans that, if implemented, would take healthcare from millions.

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“Nobody knows what this bill looks like or how it differs from the House’s American Health Care Act,” the group observed. “The GOP wants to keep it that way.”

Alongside the call-in day, Indivisible also launched a project called the TrumpCare Ten earlier this week with the goal of highlighting senators who, with enough popular pressure, could be persuaded to vote against the legislation.

“If we can just get three of them to break, then we win,” Indivisible co-founder Ezra Levin told Vox.

Levin also said Indivisible will be pressuring Democrats to do everything they can to block Republican senators from moving forward with the legislation.

“Democrats have some unilateral ability to slow down this process,” Levin said, “and they should use that power as much as possible.”

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One Hundred Eighth Graders Boycott Paul Ryan Photo Op

One hundred eighth grade students refused to be photographed with Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan during a field trip to the nation’s capital because they “didn’t want to be associated with a person who puts his party before his country,” as one student put it.

According to reporting, roughly half of the 200 students who traveled from South Orange Middle School in New Jersey protested the photo-op on Thursday, watching instead from a parking lot across the street.

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“It’s not just a picture,” eighth grade student Matthew Malespina told the local ABC News affiliate. “It’s being associated with a person who puts his party before his country.”

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Most recently, Ryan has come under fire for forcing through legislation that would strip healthcare from 23 million Americans.

Malespina’s mother, who also spoke to reporters, explained how her son had texted her ahead of time to let her know that he planned to sit out. “I think the point is that I don’t want to be associated with him and his polices,” Elissa Malespina said.

Unaware of the sizable boycott, Ryan posted a picture with himself shaking hands with some of the South Orange students to his Instagram on Friday.

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G20 Summit: Activists Plan to 'Welcome' Trump, Putin to Germany

Thousands of anti-globalization activists took to the streets and waterways of Hamburg, Germany Sunday ahead of this week’s G20 summit.

Police said at least 10,000 demonstrators marched peacefully in the rain in a prelude to the July 7-8 meeting, where 21,000 police with dogs, horses and helicopters from across Germany will attempt to protect the leaders of the world’s 20 largest economies. Trump, Erdogan, Putin, Merkel, the Saudis, and over 100,000 protesters are also expected.

Sunday’s action was the first of 30 registered demonstrations this week. Many in the crowd carried banners reading: “Fight poverty,” “Leave the Oil in the Soil,” “Stop coal,” and “Planet earth first”.

First Post reports:

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Summits of world leaders are usually highly choreographed affairs that leave little to chance.  They are held in locations that are easily shielded from demonstrators. And policy differences are papered over by envoys behind closed doors well ahead of time.  But the G20 meeting in Hamburg next week will be different. Host German Chancellor Angela Merkel has taken a high-risk gamble by choosing to hold the summit in the centre of the northern port city, partly to show the world that big protests are tolerated in a healthy democracy. This has created a huge challenge for police.

Here’s the protest schedule in Hamburg this week:

  • Wednesday-Thursday
    July 5th-6, 2017
  • Friday, July 7th
  • Saturday, July 8th
    11:00am

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Sunday’s demonstration was organized by a group called “Protest Wave G20”. Other demonstrations this week are called “Welcome to Hell” and “G20 Not Welcome.” “The policies of the G20 have created hellish conditions in many countries around the world,” Andreas Blechschmidt, one of the organzers of the 6 July protest, told Reuters in front of the Rote Flora, which stands just a few hundred meters from the site where the leaders will meet.

“We want to show them that we can turn up the heat too,” he said.

The NoG20 International coordination issued this statement this week:

“As international campaigners preparing to travel to Hamburg for the demonstrations against the G20 summit in July, we call for the defence of basic civil and political liberties currently being denied: the right to protest, the freedom of assembly, the freedom of movement…”

“The politics of neoliberalism and war is decided in the heart of our cities, closed off to citizens, protected by a militarized police force and backed up by the suspension of political rights. This shutting-down of democracy has one purpose only:  to defend the indefensible.”

“Our demonstrations speak for and of a different world: One, which is not driven by the logics of racism, misogyny, homophobia and the fear of difference, a world that takes the huge climate changes caused by human action seriously while meeting health, educational and social needs today. We reject a world in which a sports shoe can cross the Mediterranean while people drown. We speak for different cities: Cities, which are not hollowed out by real-estate speculation and the privatization of public services, cities, which are lively and diverse, where people can disagree freely and express their own hopes for a better world, cities like the Hamburg we know and love.”

#G20ProtestWelle Tweets

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House GOP Passes Budget That 'Should Not Be Allowed in a Humane Society'

By a vote of 219 to 206, the House on Friday approved a GOP-crafted budget resolution that proposes more than five trillion dollars in cuts to key safety net programs like Medicare and Medicaid to pave the way for massive tax cuts for the wealthy and massive corporations.

No Democrats voted for the budget, and 18 Republicans voted against it.

“The Republican budget contains cuts that will kill people, cuts that will hurt people, cuts that should not be allowed in a humane society.” 
—Sen. Bernie Sanders

Crucially, the resolution includes parliamentary language that eliminates the possibility of a Democratic filibuster in the Senate and will allow the GOP to “fast-track” their tax cuts with only 51 votes instead of the typical 60—the same procedure Republicans utilized in their failed attempt repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Frank Clemente, executive director of Americans for Tax Fairness (ATF), denounced the GOP budget resolution in a statement following Thursday’s vote, arguing it is “the first step toward an immoral tax scheme that will hand trillions of dollars to millionaires and corporations at the expense of America’s working families, many of whom will actually see a tax increase.”

“These tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations will ultimately be paid for by cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, education, disability services, and other national priorities,” Clemente added, “while the expansion of the deficit will further threaten Social Security.”

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While the specific spending cuts in the House GOP budget resolution—which include a trillion dollars in cuts to Medicaid—are non-binding, they are nonetheless an indication of the devastating steps Republicans are willing to take in order to deliver more wealth to the richest Americans.

The ATF offered the following breakdown of the cuts proposed under the Trump-GOP tax framework compared with the spending cuts proposed in the House budget resolution:

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Vanita Gupta, president and CEO of The Leadership Council on Civil and Human Rights, argued Thursday that the “federal budget is a representation of our country’s moral values.”

“These tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations will ultimately be paid for by cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, education, disability services, and other national priorities.”
—Frank Clemente, Americans for Tax FairnessHouse Republicans’ vote in support of the proposed budget, Gupta concluded, “is an abdication of that responsibility.”

The GOP-controlled Senate is expected to vote on its own budget blueprint in two weeks.

An analysis (pdf) released Wednesday by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Democrats on the Senate Budget Committee found that House and Senate Republicans are on the same page when it comes to “eroding” the safety net in pursuit of massive tax cuts for the rich.

As Common Dreams reported, the Senate’s budget blueprint proposes cutting Medicare and Medicaid by a combined $1.4 trillion over the next decade.

Following the House GOP vote on Friday, Sanders concluded: “The Republican budget contains cuts that will kill people, cuts that will hurt people, cuts that should not be allowed in a humane society.”

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Leclerc says Ferrari made ‘a good step forward’ at Sochi

Charles Leclerc was feeling much more upbeat about Ferrari’s performance in the Russian Grand Prix than he had been following several recent outings.

The team has been in a dramatic slump ever since the Belgian Grand Prix, where nether Leclerc nor his team mate Sebastian Vettel finished in the top ten. Things were just as bad at their home race in Monza.

There was some improvement last time out at Mugello, where both drivers finished in the points and Leclerc himself was eighth. This week the Monegasque was two places higher, and even spent a portion of the race running in the top three.

As far as Leclerc is concerned, that shows that the team is taking the right steps to get on top of its recent problems.

“Very happy about today,” he told the media after the end of the race. “We maximised what we had and that’s the most important thing. It’s a positive weekend for us and this also helps us mentally.

“Again from the beginning of the season it’s difficult to be happy with P6, but it’s the way it is,” he added.

Neither Ferrari started in the top ten after an incident in qualifying in which Vettel brought out a red flag during Q2, but Leclerc didn’t feel that that a better grid position would have changed anything anyway.

“Yesterday I was frustrated about quali, but at the end I don’t think we could have done better, even with a better quali.

“So I’m happy with the weekend. Now we need to understand what we did different to be so much better in the race than Mugello for example. But it’s a good step forward.”

The race could have gone very differently for Leclerc, who lost positions into turn 1 and then made contact with Racing Point’s Lance Stroll. The Ferrari escaped significant damage and wasn’t penalised for the contact.

“It was tricky at the beginning, as I had a pretty poor start and lost a few positions by turn one, he said. “But then I regained them immediately and from then on the performance was very good.

“Our pace was not too bad at all today,” he added. “We were quite strong in our first stint on medium tyres and we managed to go long on them also because I paid particular attention to tyre management.

“We had seen a lot of degradation on Friday in our race simulation, [so] I worked on it and I am glad it worked out well.”

Team principal Mattia Binotto agreed that it has been a step forward for the team, “at least compared to recent races both in terms of the result and our performance level.”

“Charles produced a solid drive to sixth, getting the most out of the package. He was aggressive after the start and then drove a very mature race for someone who is not yet 23,” he added.

As for Vettel, he once again missed out on a points finish and complained that he had got stuck in the ‘slow group’ outside the top ten and unable to work his way past the likes of Kevin Magnussen and Antonio Giovinazzi.

“It was a bit of a boring race, as we didn’t have many options in terms of strategy,” he conceded.

“My start, from the dirty side of the track, was not ideal and so I couldn’t benefit from other people’s crashes and collisions.

“After the safety car period I was a bit stuck and I struggled to stay close to the cars in front of me,” he continued.

“In the middle part of the race the car was quicker than yesterday in quali but I struggled to make the tyres last, partly because following other cars did not help. I did the maximum today but I was just not quick enough.”

The four time world champion – who was celebrating his 250th race start this weekend – did manage to pip Kimi Raikkonen to 13th place as the Finn equalled Rubens Barrichello’s all-time record of 322 Grand Prix career starts.

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Wisconsin Dem governor candidate calls for pardoning marijuana offenders

A top Democratic candidate in Wisconsin’s gubernatorial race says he would pardon all low-level marijuana offenders if elected.

Matt Flynn, the former chairman of the Wisconsin Democratic Party, said at a candidates’ forum Wednesday he would pardon offenders with nonviolent convictions who were not involved in dealing drugs, according to Madison’s Fox6Now.

Flynn said he does not know how many offenders such a policy would affect. He has repeatedly called for Wisconsin to legalize marijuana.

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Flynn is one of a number of Democrats seeking to run this fall against Republican Gov. Scott Walker, a two-term governor. Walker has not pardoned anyone since he took office in 2011, according to Fox 6.

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Flynn leads all Dems in the race in cash on hand with $305,000, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported Monday. He has reportedly raised $351,000.

Walker raised $3.7 million in the second half of 2017 and had $4.2 million in cash, the Journal Sentinel reported.

 

Mary Beth Cahill to serve as DNC interim CEO

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) announced Thursday that former director of public liaison for President Clinton and longtime Democratic operative Mary Beth Cahill will serve as the committee’s interim CEO. 

The announcement comes two days after Jess O’Connell’s sudden departure from the post after serving in the role for less than a year. O’Connell said her resignation was because of a personal matter, but did not specify further.

DNC chairman Tom PerezThomas Edward PerezClinton’s top five vice presidential picks Government social programs: Triumph of hope over evidence Labor’s ‘wasteful spending and mismanagement” at Workers’ Comp MORE said Cahill is a “seasoned Democratic veteran who brings decades of experience and public service to managing and electing Democrats up and down the ballot” in a statement, citing her previous experience working for the White House and other top Democrats. 

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Cahill also served as the chief of staff for the late Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and was campaign manager for former presidential nominee John KerryJohn Forbes KerryThe Memo: Trump’s troubles deepen as voters see country on wrong path The continuous whipsawing of climate change policy Budowsky: United Democrats and Biden’s New Deal MORE. 

“Democrats nationwide will benefit from her talents as we build on the energy and momentum from 2017 and work to elect Democrats in 2018 and beyond,” Perez said.  

The changeup in the national committee comes as Democrats continue to recover from Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonWhite House accuses Biden of pushing ‘conspiracy theories’ with Trump election claim Biden courts younger voters — who have been a weakness Trayvon Martin’s mother Sybrina Fulton qualifies to run for county commissioner in Florida MORE’s surprise loss in 2016 and a Republican conquest of both the House and Senate. 

Upon her departure, O’Connell emphasized the party’s need to rebuild after a difficult year. 

“Rebuilding the party will take time. While it isn’t an easy task, we developed a strategy, we implemented it, and we won races up and down the ballot in 2017,” she told NBC News. 

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