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  • Priorities Podcast

Bomb threats and cyberattacks: How election officials prepared for the 2024 election

This year’s presidential election was the most secure on record, according to John Cohen, executive director of a program for countering hybrid threats at the nonprofit Center for Internet Security. On StateScoop’s Priorities Podcast, Cohen explains that despite receiving more than 100 bomb threats, years of preparation for Election Day 2024 enabled local election officials and law enforcement to continue voting operations with minimal disruption. “We looked at potential for physical threats, cyber threats, we looked at efforts to undermine confidence in the election process or confuse voters by foreign intelligence services and non-state threat actors. And then we began looking at potential for disruptive events, the use of swatting, bomb threats, white powder envelope, suspicious devices that would be used to disrupt voting and vote tabulation,” he says. Joining him is Marci Andino, senior director of CIS’s Election Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center, who says that the threats election officials saw on Nov. 5 were precisely what they had been preparing for.

New episodes of StateScoop’s Priorities Podcast are posted each Wednesday.

For more of the latest news and trends across the state and local government technology community, subscribe to the Priorities Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts,Soundcloud or Spotify.

Weekly

Priorities Podcast

Each Wednesday, StateScoop’s Priorities Podcast explores the latest in state and local government technology news and analysis. Listen to in-depth conversations with government and industry’s top executives, and learn about trending stories affecting state and local IT leaders ranging from modernization and digital accessibility to the latest advances in generative artificial intelligence.

Hosted by Jake Williams

Jake Williams is the vice president of content and community for StateScoop and EdScoop. He's spent nearly a decade in the government IT market, covering the ins and outs of state and local government, as well as higher education. He started his journalism career in his native Pennsylvania and has also worked as a reporter for Campaigns & Elections magazine.
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