Current:Home > ScamsMinnesota election officials express confidence about security on eve of Super Tuesday early voting -AssetScope
Minnesota election officials express confidence about security on eve of Super Tuesday early voting
View
Date:2025-04-13 08:07:15
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Early voting in Minnesota’s Super Tuesday presidential primary begins Friday, and the state’s chief elections officer says his office is prepared to face the challenges of disinformation, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and physical threats and intimidation against poll workers.
“We have a combination of systems in place that almost no other state has to provide trustworthiness in our election results,” Secretary of State Steve Simon said at a news conference Thursday. He listed new election security laws, multiple layers of security for voting from home, public testing of the accuracy of voting machines, and a large corps of volunteer election judges from the major parties.
Super Tuesday is March 5, when 16 states conduct presidential primaries. Minnesotans can vote early in person at city and county election offices, or request mail-in absentee ballots to vote from home. Early voters have until Feb. 15 to claw back their ballots if they change their mind for any reason, such as their favorite candidate dropping out of the race. Arkansas, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Virginia and Vermont also start Super Tuesday voting in some capacity Friday or Saturday. Alabama began Jan. 10.
“There is no question that this election year will be among the most intense in history,” Simon told reporters. “The presidential candidates will likely inspire strong feelings. People will be passionate. And that’s OK. ... We just want to make sure that it’s channeled in the right direction, in a positive direction, in a non-violent direction.”
Simon, a Democrat, said the “spread of disinformation about our current system” will likely be the biggest election challenge for 2024. While he said debate over how the voting system should operate is normal and welcome, the “deliberate spread of false information is a danger.” He encouraged voters to seek out reliable information from state and local election offices.
Artificial intelligence isn’t as much of a threat to election security as it is a way to “amplify existing threats like disinformation,” he said. He added that Minnesota is ahead of the curve because legislators last year provided criminal penalties for distributing deepfake images of a person without their consent within 90 days of an election, if it’s done with the intent of influencing the election.
Bill Ekblad, the secretary’s election security chief, said he and Simon met with 50 county election teams last week for a tabletop exercise to help them respond to any security threats. No foreign adversaries are known to have tried cracking Minnesota’s election systems in 2020, he said. But 21 states were targeted in 2016. Ekblad named Russia as the country that was “rattling doorknobs” without getting in.
Minnesota has seen some instances of harassment, threats and intimidation against local election administrators, but almost none have been directed at the state’s 30,000 volunteer judges, Simon said. He added that a new law strengthens penalties for such acts.
Minnesota 16- and 17-year-old have been able to preregister to vote since June, so those who have since turned 18 can vote in the presidential primary. So can convicted felons who have completed their prison sentences, under another new law.
This will be Minnesota’s second presidential primary in recent decades. While Minnesota doesn’t have party registration, voters will have to decide whether to vote in the Republican, Democratic or Legal Marijuana Now primary. While their names will still be reported to the party they choose, Simon said, it’s more private than it was in 2020, when all parties got to see who voted for which side. That information remains unavailable to the public.
“I am cautiously optimistic,” Simon said. “Our polling places overwhelmingly in Minnesota are oases of calm, I think, where people can vote in peace and have peace of mind when doing so.”
veryGood! (5522)
Related
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- A rocket with a lunar landing craft blasts off on Russia’s first moon mission in nearly 50 years
- Who are the U.S. citizens set to be freed from Iran?
- Paramore cancels remaining US tour dates amid Hayley Williams' lung infection
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Fire in vacation home for people with disabilities in France kills 11
- From 'Straight Outta Compton' to '8 Mile': Essential hip-hop movies to celebrate 50 years
- Drew Lock threws for 2 TDs, including one to undrafted rookie WR Jake Bobo in Seahawks win
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Jury awards family of New York man who died after being beaten by police $35 million in damages
Ranking
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Worldcoin scans eyeballs and offers crypto. What to know about the project from OpenAI’s CEO
- UPS union negotiated a historic contract. Now workers have the final say
- Inflation ticks higher in July for first time in 13 months as rent climbs, data shows
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- With hundreds lost in the migrant shipwreck near Greece, identifying the dead is painfully slow
- Atlantic ocean hurricane season may be more eventful than normal, NOAA says
- Review: Netflix's OxyContin drama 'Painkiller' is just painful
Recommendation
Trump's 'stop
Snake in a toilet: Slithering visitor to Arizona home camps out where homeowner least expects it
Atlantic hurricane season is now predicted to be above-normal this year, NOAA says
Statewide preschool initiative gets permanent approval as it enters 25th year in South Carolina
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Toyota recalls: Toyota Tundra, Hybrid pickups recalled for fuel leak, fire concerns
Sweden stakes claim as Women’s World Cup favorite by stopping Japan 2-1 in quarterfinals
2023 Atlantic hurricane outlook worsens as ocean temperatures hit record highs, forecasters say