So first off, there is no question that Russia manipulated the 2016 election in a massive way. It was in fact hijacked.
They certainly tried, but ...
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...russians-changed-vote-tallies-2016/592978002/
Senate report: No evidence that Russians changed vote tallies in 2016
Erin Kelly
USA TODAY
Mark Warner of Virginia, the committee's senior Democrat, said he's "concerned that we as a country are still not fully prepared for the 2018 midterm elections."
"That’s one reason why we, as a Committee, have decided that it is important to get out as much information as possible about the threat, so that governments at every level take it seriously and take the necessary steps to defend ourselves," Warner said.
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Among the report's findings:
• At least 18 states, and possibly 21, had election systems targeted by Russian-affiliated hackers in some way. Other states saw "suspicious or malicious behavior" that the U.S. Intelligence Community was not able to definitively tie to Russia.
• In a small number of states, the hackers were in a position to change or delete voter registration data, but they did not appear to have the power to manipulate individual votes or vote totals.
working with states now, the report says.
"Although early interactions between state election officials and DHS were strained, states now largely give DHS credit for making tremendous progress over the last six months," the committee concludes.
However, the nation's aging voting system remain vulnerable to attack, the report says.
"Voting systems across the United States are outdated, and many do not have a paper record of votes as a backup counting system that can be reliably audited, should there be allegations of machine manipulation," the committee concluded. "In addition, the number of vendors selling machines is shrinking, raising concerns about supply chain vulnerability."
The committee also updated election security recommendations that it first released in March. Among them:
security clearances so they can be told what's happening.
• States should rapidly replace old voting systems. At a minimum, any new machine should have a voter-verified paper trail and no WiFi capability that can be hacked.
