Test Lists

  • Regression Package Testing List Page
Publisher QA3 - UPP Test
  • Regression Package Testing List Page
1 / 0

Fired DHS official: ‘Dangerous’ to embrace false and baseless attacks on election

December 16, 2020
By Jeremy Herb, CNN
Audio Image
Share this...
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin

Christopher Krebs, the former top administration official for cybersecurity who was fired by President Donald Trump, told a Senate committee Wednesday it was “dangerous” for elected officials to embrace false and baseless attacks on the 2020 election and undermine public confidence in the result.

“I think we’re past the point where we need to be having conversations about the outcome of this election,” Krebs told the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. “I think that continued assaults on democracy and the outcome of this election, that only serves to undermine confidence in the process, is ultimately corrosive to the institutions that support elections.”

Krebs, who did not mention Trump specifically, was fired by the President last month after the agency he led, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, pushed back against the President’s baseless claims of widespread fraud in the election. In his prepared remarks, Krebs said that the “current wild and baseless domestic claims of hackers and malicious algorithms flipping the vote in states across the country due to ties to deceased foreign dictators serve only to confuse, scare, and ultimately undermine confidence in the election.”

“While elections are sometimes messy, this was a secure election, of that I have no doubt,” Krebs said.

Krebs is testifying Wednesday at a controversial hearing convened by Senate Homeland Security Chairman Ron Johnson, which comes one day after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said plainly that Joe Biden was the President-elect and privately urged Republican senators not to join in an expected House challenge to the election results next month when Congress counts the Electoral College votes.

Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican, said Tuesday he wasn’t planning to dispute the results during the joint session of Congress, but he defended his decision to hold Wednesday’s hearing on election “irregularities.” In his opening statement, Johnson ticked off various allegations of fraud, criticizing Democrats for attacking him over the hearing when they’ve raised questions about vote counting in previous elections.

Still, Johnson did not say he was trying to dispute the outcome, saying that the question was “whether the level of fraud would alter the election.”

“This year, in dozens of court cases, through the certification process in each state and by the Electoral College vote, the conclusion has collectively been reached that it would not,” Johnson said.

Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, the top Democrat on the committee, said that Wednesday’s hearing was dangerous when many Republicans have failed to acknowledge Biden’s win and promoting baseless attacks on the election.

“Whether intended or not, this hearing gives a platform to conspiracy theories and lies, and it’s a destructive exercise that has no place in the United States Senate,” Peters said in his opening statement.

In addition to Krebs, the hearing’s witnesses include two Trump campaign lawyers who tried to overturn the election results in Nevada and Wisconsin and a Republican Pennsylvania state representative, as well as former independent counsel Kenneth Starr, who was part of Trump’s impeachment defense.

Senators in both parties have raised concerns that the hearing is promoting debunked conspiracy theories about the election, and one Republican senator is not participating. It comes as Trump has continued to spread baseless and false claims about fraud in the election and ignored Monday’s Electoral College vote that affirmed Biden as the winner of the presidential election, 306 electoral votes to 232.

“We have a process in this country, under the Constitution and our judicial system, which should be followed,” Sen. Mitt Romney, a Utah Republican who is not participating in the hearing, told CNN last week. “The idea of trying to change that process or interrupt it is, in my opinion, a grave mistake.”

Several of the witnesses testifying Wednesday — James Troupis, who represented the Trump campaign in Wisconsin; Jesse Binnall, who was Trump’s attorney in Nevada, and GOP Pennsylvania state Rep. Francis Ryan — repeated many of the same claims about the election results that have been dismissed repeatedly in the courts as the Trump’s challenges have been rejected.

Johnson’s committee has been no stranger to controversy this year. His committee released the findings of its investigation into the business dealings of Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, during the fall campaign, which Romney also criticized as a political move.

And last month, he invited a vaccine skeptic who has promoted the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid-19 patients — despite the Food and Drug Administration stating that it should not be used to treat coronavirus patients — to testify at a committee hearing.

Johnson and Peters clashed Wednesday over the committee’s probe into Ukraine, in which Democrats charged that the committee had taken Russian disinformation from Ukrainian officials with ties to Russia, while Johnson responded that it was Democrats spreading disinformation.

Next month, Congress will formally count the Electoral College vote on January 6, a process where a group of House Republicans are planning to object to the results in states Biden won. It’s a challenge that can only delay the inevitable, but if a Republican senator joins the objections, the two chambers are required to debate and vote on whether to uphold the challenge.

Johnson said ahead of Wednesday’s hearing that he was not planning to challenge the results on the floor.

McConnell on Tuesday urged Republican senators on a private conference call not to join House members to object to state electoral results, a source on the call told CNN. Other top Republicans, including Senate Majority Whip John Thune and Senate Rules Chairman Roy Blunt, echoed that sentiment. Doing so, they said, would be fruitless and force them to cast a politically challenging vote against the President that day.

This story has been updated with additional developments Wednesday.

CNN’s Suzanne Malveaux, Geneva Sands, Manu Raju and Ali Zaslav contributed to this report.

Categories: Madison Magazine Logo

Latest Stories

Eu Regulator Authorizes Astrazeneca Vaccine For All Adults

EU regulator authorizes AstraZeneca vaccine for all adults

Rayos Syndication User,
KXLY-Latest Stories

Regulators authorized AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine for use in adults throughout the European Union on Friday, amid criticism the bloc is not moving fast enough to vaccinate its population.

Ex Fbi Lawyer Given Probation For Russia Probe Actions

Ex-FBI lawyer given probation for Russia probe actions

Rayos Syndication User,
KXLY-Latest Stories

WASHINGTON (AP) — A former FBI lawyer was sentenced to probation for altering an email that the Justice Department relied on during its surveillance of an aide to President Donald Trump during the Russia investigation.

Evers: Repealing Mask Mandate Like Eliminating Speed Limits

Evers: Repealing mask mandate like eliminating speed limits

Rayos Syndication User,
KXLY-Latest Stories

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Tony Evers lashed out Friday at rival Republicans who tried to repeal his statewide mask mandate, saying killing the order would be a ridiculous move comparable to abolishing speed limits.

Conservatives Praise South Carolina Win On Abortion Ban

Conservatives praise South Carolina win on abortion ban

Rayos Syndication User,
KXLY-Latest Stories

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — As some conservatives in South Carolina celebrated getting a bill that would ban almost all abortions in the state past a legislative barrier and likely becoming law, they said they are not finished trying to end all abortions.

Moscow Court Puts Navalny’s Allies Under House Arrest

Moscow court puts Navalny's allies under house arrest

Rayos Syndication User,
KXLY-Latest Stories

A Moscow court on Friday put the brother and several allies of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny under house arrest for two months as authorities sought to stymie more protests over the jailing of the top Kremlin foe.

Most Popular

9:40 Future Import Test

One more current test NW

Current UPP Import NW

Test New Article 12092025 - 4 - Message

Test New Article 12092025 - 4 - Election

Test New Article 12092025 - 2 - Closing

© 2026 Publisher QA3 – UPP Test.

Privacy Policy
Powered byBLOX Digital
X