Trump fires agency head who vouched for 2020 vote security
 
 
President Donald Trump fired the nation’s top
election security official, a widely respected member of his administration who
had dared to refute the president’s unsubstantiated claims of electoral fraud
and vouch for the integrity of the vote.
While abrupt, the dismissal Tuesday of Christopher
Krebs, the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency,
was not a surprise. Since his loss, Trump has been ridding his administration
of officials seen as insufficiently loyal and has been denouncing the conduct
of an election that led to an embarrassing defeat to Democrat Joe Biden.
That made Krebs a prime target. He had used the
imprimatur of Trump’s own Department of Homeland Security, where his agency was
based, to issue a stream of statements and tweets over the past week attesting
to the proper conduct of the election and denouncing the falsehoods spread by
the Republican president and his supporters — without mentioning Trump by name.
Krebs stood by those assertions after his ouster.
“Honored to serve. We did it right,” he said in a
brief statement on Twitter. “Defend Today, Secure Tomorrow.”
He closed with the phrase “Protect 2020,” which had
been his agency’s slogan ahead of the election.
The firing of Krebs, a Trump appointee, came the
week after the dismissal of Defense Secretary Mark Esper, part of a broader
shakeup that put Trump loyalists in senior Pentagon positions.
A former Microsoft executive, Krebs ran the agency,
known as CISA, from its creation in the wake of Russian interference with the
2016 election through the November election. He won bipartisan praise as CISA
coordinated federal state and local efforts to defend electoral systems from
foreign or domestic interference.
Hours before being dismissed, Krebs tweeted out a
report citing 59 election security experts saying there is no credible evidence
of computer fraud in the 2020 election outcome.
Trump responded on Twitter later in the day. He
repeated unsubstantiated claims about the vote and wrote “effective
immediately, Chris Krebs has been terminated as Director of the Cybersecurity
and Infrastructure Security Agency.”
Officials with CISA and its parent agency, the
Department of Homeland Security, had no immediate comment.
Members of Congress — mostly Democrats — denounced
the firing.
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., chairman of the House
intelligence committee, assailed Trump for “retaliating against Director Krebs
and other officials who did their duty. It’s pathetic, but sadly predictable
that upholding and protecting our democratic processes would be cause for
firing.”
One of the few Republicans joining in the criticism
was Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska, a frequent Trump critic. “Chris Krebs did a
really good job, as state election officials all across the nation will tell
you, and he obviously should not be fired,” he said.
Biden campaign spokesman Michael Gwin noted that
bipartisan election officials have dismissed Trump’s claims of widespread
fraud. “Chris Krebs should be commended for his service in protecting our
elections, not fired for telling the truth.”
Krebs kept a low profile even as he voiced
confidence ahead of the November vote and, afterward, knocked down allegations
that the count was tainted by fraud. The repudiation of Trump was notable
coming from a component of DHS, which has been criticized for seeming to be too
closely aligned with the president’s political goals.
CISA issued statements dismissing claims that large
numbers of dead people could vote or that someone could change results without
detection.
It also distributed a statement from a coalition of
federal and state officials concluding there was no evidence that votes were
compromised or altered in the Nov. 3 election and that the vote was the most
secure in American history.
Krebs avoided ever directly criticizing the
president and tried to stay above the political fray, even as he worked to
contradict misinformation coming from the president and his supporters. “It’s
not our job to fact check the president,” he said at a briefing with reporters
on the eve of the election.
CISA works with the state and local officials who
run U.S. elections as well as private companies that supply voting equipment to
address cybersecurity and other threats while monitoring balloting and
tabulation from a control room at its headquarters near Washington. It also
works with industry and utilities to protect the nation’s industrial base and
power grid from threats.
The agency enjoys a good reputation among its core
constituency — the state and local election officials who rely on its advice
and services at a time of near-constant cyberattack -- as well as on Capitol
Hill, where lawmakers recently proposed an increase of its annual budget of
around $2 billion.
His removal is a “disturbing sign for American
government,” said California Secretary of State Alex Padilla.
“Chris Krebs has been an accessible, reliable
partner for elections officials across the country, and across party lines, as
we have fortified our cyber defenses since 2016,” Padilla said. “Our elections
infrastructure has become stronger because of leaders like Chris Krebs and in
spite of the actions and lies coming from the White House.”
The agency emerged from rocky beginnings. Just
before President Barack Obama left office, the U.S. designated election systems
as critical national security infrastructure, like dams or power plants, as a
result of the interference by Russia, which included the penetration of state
elections systems as well as massive disinformation.
Some state election officials and Republicans,
suspicious of federal intrusion on their turf, were opposed to the designation.
The National Association of Secretaries of State adopted a resolution in
opposition to the move in February 2017. But the Trump administration supported
the designation, and, eventually, skeptical state officials welcomed the
assistance.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


