Skip to content

ODNI to Give Election Security Briefings Ahead of November Vote

Susan Rice Would Say Yes If Asked to Be Joe Biden’s Running Mate

Former national security adviser Susan Rice said she’d accept an offer to be presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s running mate. Biden, 77, has said he’ll choose a younger woman as his 2020 partner. Rice, 55, who served in the Obama administration, fits the bill. Asked by a PBS reporter during a video interview Thursday whether she’d accept an offer to be Biden’s running mate, Rice said yes. “Should I say no?” Rice said. “You know, I think everybody who’s been asked that question has given the same answer. So that’s not a surprise.” Then-Vice President Joe Biden (L) and then-National Security Advisor Susan Rice talk as then-President Barack Obama and then-Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi brief the press after a bilateral meeting in the Oval Office of the White…

ODNI to Give Election Security Briefings Ahead of November Vote

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) on Friday announced that the U.S. intelligence community will lead new election security threat briefings for presidential candidates, their campaigns, and political organizations ahead of the presidential election in November.

Bill Evanina, the Director of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center, will serve as the intelligence community’s point man in what the ODNI said was a “critical effort” to secure the election against potential malicious meddling.

“U.S. elections are the foundation of our nation’s democracy. We are committed to supporting this Administration’s whole-of-government effort to secure the 2020 election,” Evanina said in a statement.

ODNI said the change is an important improvement and simplification of the threat notification process.

The intelligence community will work together with the FBI and DHS to identify threats, while Evanina and the elections team will deliver assessments to those impacted by potential malicious influence.

ODNI to Give Election Security Briefings Ahead of November Vote

A senior White House official told Fox News that “the biggest complaint from the 2016 election was the lack of, and insufficiency, of briefings to campaigns and candidates,” referring to then-candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

“The last election speaks to itself, in terms of how much was going on, and how poorly the campaigns and candidates were kept abreast in order to protect their campaigns,” the White House official told the outlet.

The changes to the security briefings protocols come after a bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee investigation found that Russia interfered in the 2016 election.

A heavily-redacted report (pdf) from the Senate committee, released in April, affirmed the U.S. intelligence community’s conclusions that Russia conducted a far-ranging influence campaign in 2016 approved by Russian President Vladimir Putin himself.

Intelligence agencies concluded in January 2017 that Russians had engaged in cyber-espionage and distributed messages through Russian-controlled propaganda outlets to undermine public faith in the democratic process, hurt Clinton, and boost Trump.

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.) said in a statement that his panel “found no reason to dispute” the intelligence community’s conclusions, saying they reflected strong tradecraft and analytical reasoning.

He said the agencies’ conclusion that such election interference is “the new normal” has been borne out in the three years since it was published.

“With the 2020 presidential election approaching, it’s more important than ever that we remain vigilant against the threat of interference from hostile foreign actors,” Burr said.

Focus News: ODNI to Give Election Security Briefings Ahead of November Vote

Chinese-Made DJI Mavic Drones May Be Taken off US Market Over Patent Infringement

The popular Mavic series of drones made by Chinese manufacturer DJI may be yanked from the U.S. market as early as July after a ruling by the International Trade Commission (ITC) found the devices infringe on a patent held by an American firm. DJI, the world’s largest maker of drones, infringed on a patent held by Autel, according to Steptoe, the law firm representing Autel before the trade commission. The chief administrative law judge of the ITC recommended that the infringing products—including Mavic Pro, Mavic Pro Platinum, Mavic 2 Pro, Mavic 2 Zoom, Mavic Air, and Spark—be banned from importation into the United States. “If the chief administrative law judge’s determination is upheld by the full commission, these products could be taken off the U.S. market as early as July,” Autel’s law…