President Obama has directed the intelligence community to conduct “a full review” of the 2016 election in light of reports of Russian interference, homeland security adviser Lisa Monaco said Friday.
“We’ll see what comes out” but there will be a report to “a range of stakeholders to include Congress,” Monaco told reporters at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast.
“We’re going to make public as much as we can,” White House spokesman Eric Schultz said, but he noted the report will “contain highly sensitive and classified information.”
Monaco gave few other details about the report, other than to say that it will “capture lessons learned and … report from a range of stakeholders to include their comments.”
According to Schultz, the hacking review will also look at past elections — not just 2016.
Lawmakers immediately hailed the news and urged the administration to make public as much of the report as possible.
“The Administration should work to declassify as much of it as possible, while protecting our sources and methods, and make it available to the public,” Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), the ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, said in a statement.
The news comes as Democrats across Capitol Hill — and some Republicans — are clamoring for investigations into reported Russian hacking during the election.
Source The Hill