Federal News
DHS Proposes Ban on Voting Machines
March 17, 2026
David Harvilicz, Assistant Secretary for Cyber, Infrastructure, Risk and Resilience Policy at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), has publicly advocated for banning voting machines in all federal elections, citing concerns over their security vulnerabilities. This position signals potential shifts in federal election infrastructure procurement priorities and may influence future requirements for election technology acquisitions. Procurement professionals and contractors involved in election systems should anticipate possible changes in federal standards and procurement strategies that could deprioritize traditional voting machine vendors in favor of alternative or enhanced election security solutions.
- DHS's stance may lead to revised procurement policies restricting or eliminating voting machine purchases for federal elections.
- Vendors currently supplying voting machines should evaluate risks and consider diversifying offerings toward secure election infrastructure technologies.
- Election technology contractors and integrators should monitor DHS policy developments for emerging requirements emphasizing cybersecurity and resilience.
- This development underscores the importance of aligning procurement strategies with evolving federal election security priorities and potential regulatory changes.
DHS needs to ban voting machines for all federal elections. The time is now.
— David Harvilicz, DHS official
Agencies
Department of Homeland Security, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Office of the Director of National Intelligence
Vendors
Tranquility AI
Locations
Sources
- This DHS official oversees the security of federal elections. He wants to ban voting machines. · Tucson Sentinel · Mar 17