GOP-led House panel accuses cybersecurity agency of violating citizens' civil liberties
The federal government agency charged with protecting critical infrastructure and guarding against cybersecurity threats is accused of “exceeding its statutory authority” in its post-2016-election efforts to monitor domestic social media for evidence of misinformation, disinformation and malinformation, according to a House Republican-led committee’s interim report.
The House Judiciary Committee and Subcommittee on Weaponization of
the Federal Government issued a report accusing the Critical
Infrastructure and Cybersecurity Agency, or CISA, of facilitating the
“censorship of Americans directly and through third-party
intermediaries.” The committee’s investigation cites internal Department
of Homeland Security emails and meeting notes.
The core claims of the 41-page report focus on changes at the agency
since the 2016 election. A January 2017 report from the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence found Russian efforts to influence the
election “demonstrated a significant escalation in directness, level of
activity, and scope of effort compared to previous operations.” The
report did not assess “the impact that Russian activities had on the
outcome of the 2016 election.”
The House Judiciary Committee’s report, peppered with politically
charged language, alleges that CISA expanded the monitoring of foreign
“disinformation” to “all disinformation including Americans’ speech.”
House Republicans say concern about CISA’s expanded mandate and
overwhelmingly negative backlash from DHS’ Disinformation Governance
Board prompted the department to begin “scrubbing CISA’s website of
references to domestic ‘misinformation’ and ‘disinformation.’”
Some election officials expressed concern about the agency’s involvement
with domestic speech related to elections, the committee said, citing
the CISA documents. According to the report, on August 2, 2022, an
official with the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS)
warned “that it is important for CISA to remain within their operational
and mission limits. CISA specifically should stick with misinformation
and disinformation as related to cybersecurity issues.”
The report also alleges that even within DHS, some were worried about how its expanded activities would ultimately be viewed.
The report alleges a May 2022 email from Suzanne Spaulding, a former
senior intelligence official who worked on the project, to a colleague
about the increased public attention on the matter. According to the
report, Spaulding wrote, “It’s only a matter of time before someone
starts asking about our work… I’m not sure this keeps until our public
meeting in June.”
Dr. Kate Starbird, identified in the report as the co-founder of the
University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public, responded to
Spaulding, writing, “Yes. I agree. We have a couple of pretty obvious
vulnerabilities.”
The GOP-led committee and subcommittee take issue with attempts by the
government to workshop ways to curb the domestic spread of
misinformation and disinformation – led by the “Protecting Critical
Infrastructure from Misinformation & Disinformation” Subcommittee.
That committee, a voluntary group that served in an advisory role for
CISA, was ultimately disbanded, according to the report, but not before
issuing two sets of formal recommendations in June and September 2022.
In response to the “political environment and legal risks,”
congressional investigators write that Starbird also noted in a May 2022
email that the MDM Committee “removed ‘monitoring’ from just about
every place where it appeared” in their recommendations.
In a statement to CBS News, Starbird wrote that the committee’s report
“grossly misrepresented” her work and that of the advisory board.
“This report disregards clarifying information within the broader record
of our subcommittee’s communications and final recommendations — as
well as my voluntary testimony to this Committee — to push a misleading
narrative of censorship,” said Starbird. “Our subcommittee played no
role in censoring any speech, nor did we advocate for the social media
platforms to take any action to limit the spread of speech.”
CISA Executive Director Brandon Wales said in a statement, “CISA does
not and has never censored speech or facilitated censorship; any such
claims are patently false.”
“Every day, the men and women of CISA execute the agency’s mission of
reducing risk to U.S. critical infrastructure in a way that protects
Americans’ freedom of speech, civil rights, civil liberties, and
privacy,” Wales continued. “In response to concerns from election
officials of all parties regarding foreign influence operations and
disinformation that may impact the security of election infrastructure,
CISA mitigates the risk of disinformation by sharing information on
election literacy and election security with the public and by
amplifying the trusted voices of election officials across the nation.”
The committee’s report argues, “Labeling speech ‘misinformation’ does
not strip it of First Amendment protection. That is so even if the
speech is untrue, as “[s]ome false statements are inevitable if there is
to be an open and vigorous expression of views in public and private
conversation.”
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Catherine Herridge
Catherine Herridge is a senior investigative correspondent for CBS News covering national security and intelligence based in Washington, D.C.
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