“It’s once again the Obama administration reaching beyond it’s constitutional limits,” Fund said. “The states have the authority in elections in the Constitution. If the federal government wants to intrude, wants to take over part of it, it has to negotiate with the states who are sovereign entities in their own right and come to some sort of compromise.
“Instead, it’s an ‘Our way or the highway’ approach, and the states are naturally resentful of the fact that the federal government is now holding over them the sword that anytime there’s a problem in any election system, the federal government is aggregating to itself the power to step in and who knows what they’re going to do.”
In addition to what he sees as a blatant violation of the Constitution, Fund said the Obama administration is taking action to address a problem that does not exist.
“The actual voting isn’t tied to the Internet,” he noted. “It can’t be hacked, except in a very few exceptions. The voter registration rolls might be a problem because they often are connected to the Internet. But that’s not the votes. So people are confusing what the hackers have been able to do with voter registration systems with the actual voting machines.
“If you wanted to hack them, you’d have to hack them individually one by one. You can’t do it through the Internet. You can’t do it nationally.”
So what’s really at work here?
Fund said the federal government instinctively bristles at the idea states have sovereignty in certain areas and it has recently lost power on elections.
“The feds have always been angry that the states sometimes don’t listen to them. For example, the feds lost the power just a couple of years ago in the Voting Rights Act to force 14 states to run all of their election changes through Washington. The Supreme Court said, ‘It’s been 50 years since the civil rights revolution. It’s time to let that go. If Congress wants to pass a new law, they have to do that,” Fund explained.
“The feds have chafed on that because it means they can’t send monitors to certain states. They can’t intrude,” Fund said. “They can’t physically interfere in elections unless the states invite them in.”
He said this new rules gives the federal government a foot in the door again.
“This means the federal government has a new excuse, now that they’ve lost the voting rights excuse. They have a new excuse to step in any time they want and dictate or second-guess what the states and counties are doing,” he said.
Fund is convinced that the the premise of the federal government coming in to make sure elections are not hacked is simply one step in a long-term endeavor to choke the sovereignty out of the states.
“This is a lot like the frog in the pot of boiling water. The feds are turning up the heat on the states,” Fund warned. “They hope that if they do it slowly enough and carefully enough, the states won’t be able to squawk enough. Finally, the feds will be in charge and the states will be a secondary player in elections, not the primary player as the Constitution envisioned.”
Even before the new rule granting DHS new power to get involved with state and local elections, some states accused the department of trying to hack their systems unannounced in 2016. Georgia is making the most noise about it. Kentucky and West Virginia have reportedly expressed similar concerns.
Fund said the details on those stories are murky.
“We know very little because the feds aren’t talking,” he said. “Apparently, they didn’t tell the states even after they’d made the attempt. It’s one thing to make a surprise attempt to hack into a state system. It’s another thing after the attempt has been made not to tell the state about it.
“So once again, the feds are playing sneaky, not telling the states what they would normally be expected to tell them, and all because the feds think they know best,” Fund said.
The silver lining to the Obama administration’s action is that it can be easily reversed.
“With the stroke of a pen, it could go away tomorrow if tomorrow was Jan. 20, which is the day Donald Trump is inaugurated,” Fund said.
However, he warns not to assume Trump will scrap the new federal power right away.
“I suspect at the very least he should have his appointees ask some very searching questions about, ‘Was this really justified? Couldn’t they have worked with the states toward some sort of compromise solution? Does the government always have to bigfoot in if there’s a perceived issue involved?’ The answer to those questions is no, it doesn’t. The feds should get in the habit of cooperating with the states, not commanding the states.”
Critics contend that compromised voter registration information online ought to be a major concern. Fund said there’s an easy solution.
“The smartest way to stop hackers from getting into voter registration systems, which are online, is to stop online registration,” he said. “Go back to the old system where you have to fill out a postcard and send it in. The records are kept. It’s a little cumbersome, but you can’t hack a piece of paper.”
“I’m not saying hackers aren’t a problem,” Fund said. “I’m saying that if we keep our systems simple, don’t go to Internet voting which would be a potential disaster, and if we maintain vigilance, we don’t have to surrender our traditional control of state and local elections and federal elections to Washington.”