The U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC): February 23, 2023
Overview and Selected Issues for Congress
Karen L. Shanton
The U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) is an independent federal agency that is
Analyst in American
charged with helping voters participate in the electoral process and election officials improve the
National Government
administration of elections. It was established by the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA) as
part of Congress’s response to problems with the administration of the 2000 elections.
The EAC—and the legislation that created it—marked something of a shift in the federal
approach to election administration. Previous federal election laws had set requirements for the administration of federal
elections, but HAVA was the first to back its requirements with substantial support. The act authorized grant programs for
elections and an assistance-oriented elections agency, the EAC.
That focus on assistance—in combination with other objectives, such as providing for a range of expert input into agency
activities and guarding against partisanship—informed the duties and structure of the agency. The EAC’s rulemaking
authority is limited, and its other duties are primarily oriented toward facilitating or incentivizing elections activities rather
than compelling them. Those duties, which are designed for input from a range of elections stakeholders, include
administering grant programs; providing for voluntary voting system guidelines, testing, and certification; issuing voluntary
guidance for implementation of certain HAVA requirements; conducting research and sharing best practices; and establishing
a youth voter participation and poll worker recruitment program.
The EAC consists of an appointed commission, a professional staff led by an executive director and general counsel, an
Office of Inspector General, three statutory advisory bodies (Board of Advisors, Standards Board, and Technical Guidelines
Development Committee), and one agency-created advisory body (Local Leadership Council). The structure of the EAC, like
its duties, reflects its emphasis on assistance. The agency’s advisory bodies are central to its functioning, with opportunities
for input into its guidance, planning, and staffing. Voters are represented on one of the advisory bodies, and state officials,
local officials, or their representatives make up some or all of the membership of all four.
The EAC was also set up to ensure a range of expert input into agency activities and help guard against partisanship. In
addition to voters and state and local officials, for example, the advisory bodies include experts in a range of other fields
relevant to election administration. The membership and selection processes for the commission and some of the advisory
bodies, as well as a quorum requirement for certain actions by the commission, are also designed for partisan balance.
Both at the time of HAVA and since, opinions have differed about exactly what role the EAC should play. One question
Congress considered when developing the agency was whether it should exist as a separate agency at all. That question was
also a subject of particular congressional interest for a period starting with the 112th Congress. As of the beginning of that
Congress, the EAC had distributed most of the funding it was authorized by HAVA to administer and completed much of the
research the act directed it to conduct. The authorization of operational funding for the agency had expired, and the National
Association of Secretaries of State had recently renewed a resolution that called for disbanding the agency.
Those developments were taken by some as evidence that the agency had outlived its usefulness. Members introduced
legislation to terminate the EAC in each of the 112th through 115th Congresses, and the House Appropriations Committee
recommended cutting or eliminating its funding each year between FY2012 and FY2018.
At least as of the 116th and 117th Congresses, however, debate about whether there is a role for the EAC seems to have
receded in prominence. Recent election cycles have seen a number of high-profile developments, including foreign efforts to
interfere in the 2016 elections and the emergence of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in the 2020 cycle,
and the EAC has played a role in the federal response to those developments. It has administered grant funding Congress has
provided in response to some of them, for example, and developed resources to help election officials address physical and
cybersecurity threats to their systems.
Supporters of an ongoing role for the EAC have cited its participation in the federal response to recent developments as new
grounds to extend or expand it. More generally, the primary focus of legislative activity on the agency seems to have shifted
in the 116th and 117th Congresses from whether there is a role for the EAC to what that role should be.
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Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Notes on Terminology ............................................................................................................... 1
Overview ......................................................................................................................................... 2
Duties ........................................................................................................................................ 3
Grant Programs ................................................................................................................... 4
Voting System Guidelines, Testing, and Certification ........................................................ 8
Voluntary Guidance .......................................................................................................... 10
Research and Best Practices ............................................................................................... 11
Help America Vote College Program ................................................................................ 12
Structure .................................................................................................................................. 13
Commission ...................................................................................................................... 13
Professional Staff .............................................................................................................. 15
Advisory Bodies ............................................................................................................... 16
Office of Inspector General (OIG) .................................................................................... 18
History ........................................................................................................................................... 19
Initial Setup ............................................................................................................................. 19
Efforts to Terminate................................................................................................................. 20
Response to Recent Developments ......................................................................................... 23
Legislative Activity ....................................................................................................................... 24
Whether to Maintain an Election Administration Agency ...................................................... 24
What the Agency Should Do ................................................................................................... 25
How the Agency Should Function .......................................................................................... 26
Potential Considerations for Congress .......................................................................................... 27
Figures
Figure 1. EAC Organizational Chart ............................................................................................. 15
Figure 2. Tenures of EAC Commissioners .................................................................................... 23
Tables
Table 1. Funding Authorized and Appropriated for EAC Grant Programs ..................................... 6
Table 2. Proposed and Enacted Funding for EAC Operations, FY2003 to FY2013 ..................... 21
Table 3. Proposed and Enacted Funding for EAC Operations, FY2014 to FY2023 ..................... 21
Table 4. Selected Legislation Related to Whether to Maintain an Election Administration
Agency ....................................................................................................................................... 25
Table 5. Selected Legislation Related to What the Agency Should Do ......................................... 26
Table 6. Selected Legislation Related to How the Agency Should Function ................................ 27
Contacts
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 29
Congressional Research Service
The U.S. Election Assistance Commission: Overview and Selected Issues for Congress
Congressional Research Service
The U.S. Election Assistance Commission: Overview and Selected Issues for Congress
Introduction
The U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) is an independent federal agency that is
charged with helping voters participate in the electoral process and election officials improve the
administration of elections. It was established by the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA; P.L.
107-252; 52 U.S.C. §§20901-21145) as part of Congress’s response to problems with the
administration of the 2000 elections.1
The EAC—and the legislation that created it—marked something of a shift in the federal
approach to election administration. Previous federal election laws had set requirements for the
administration of federal elections, but HAVA was the first to back its requirements with
substantial support.2 The act authorized grant programs for elections and an assistance-oriented
elections agency, the EAC.3
There was broad support in Congress during the HAVA debate for the idea of providing some
assistance along those lines. Both at the time and since, however, opinions have differed about
exactly what role the EAC should play. Members have disagreed about whether the agency
should focus solely on assistance or also have regulatory authority, for example, and whether it
should be temporary or permanent.
Changes in the election administration landscape and in Congress have brought different aspects
of the debate to the forefront at different times. The 112th through 115th Congresses saw attempts
to terminate the agency, whereas recent developments like foreign efforts to interfere in the 2016
elections and the onset of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in the 2020
election cycle have been cited as new grounds to extend or expand it.4
This report provides an overview of the agency in the context of those changes. It starts by
describing the EAC’s duties and structure, and then summarizes the history of the agency and
related legislative activity. The report closes by introducing some considerations that may be of
interest to Members who are weighing whether or how to engage with issues related to the EAC
or to election administration more broadly.
Notes on Terminology
In this report, “state” is generally intended to include the District of Columbia (DC) and U.S.
territories. Exceptions to that general usage are references to “the 50 states,” which do not include
1 For more on HAVA, see CRS Report R46949, The Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA): Overview and Ongoing
Role in Election Administration Policy, by Karen L. Shanton.
2 For more on pre-HAVA requirements for the administration of federal elections, see CRS Report R45302, Federal
Role in U.S. Campaigns and Elections: An Overview, by R. Sam Garrett.
3 For more on federal grant funding for elections, see CRS Report R46646, Election Administration: Federal Grant
Funding for States and Localities, by Karen L. Shanton; and CRS Report WPD00035, Federal Role in Elections
Funding, by Karen L. Shanton.
4 See, for example, U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Markup of H.R. 634, Election Assistance
Commission Termination Act; H.R. 133, to Reduce Federal Spending and the Deficit by Terminating Taxpayer
Financing of Presidential Election Campaigns; and Committee Resolution 115-4, the Committee’s Views and Estimates
on the Fiscal Year 2018, markup, 115th Cong., 1st sess., February 7, 2017 (Washington: GPO, 2017), pp. 2-3; and U.S.
Congress, Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, Nominations, 115th Cong., 2nd sess., November 28, 2018,
S.Hrg. 115-583 (Washington: GPO, 2019), pp. 1, 4.
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DC or the territories, and references to “HAVA states,” which do not include the Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI).5
“Election Assistance Commission” and “EAC” are sometimes used to refer to the appointed
commission that is part of the agency. To avoid confusion, the report reserves those terms for the
agency as a whole and uses “commission” for the appointed commission.
EAC at a Glance
Mission: “The U.S. Election Assistance Commission helps election officials improve the administration of
elections and helps Americans participate in the voting process.”6
Enabling Legislation: Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA; P.L. 107-252; 52 U.S.C. §§20901-21145)
Commission: Four members recommended by majority and minority congressional leadership and appointed by
the President subject to the advice and consent of the Senate
Advisory Bodies:
Board of Advisors: 35 members representing a range of election administration stakeholders, including state
and local officials, federal agencies, science and technology experts, and voters
Standards Board: 110 members, with one state official and one local official from each of the 50 states, DC,
American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands
Technical Guidelines Development Committee (TGDC): 15 members representing a range of election
administration stakeholders, including the director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
as chair, state and local officials, individuals with disabilities, and science and technology experts
Local Leadership Council (LLC): 100 members, with two local election officials from each of the 50 states
Personnel (FY2021): 46 ful -time equivalent (FTE) positions7
Appropriations for Salaries and Expenses (FY2023): $28.0 mil ion, including $1.5 mil ion to be made
available to NIST for activities authorized under HAVA and $1.0 mil ion for the Help America Vote Col ege
Program8
Primary Oversight Committees: Committee on House Administration and Senate Committee on Rules and
Administration
Appropriations Subcommittees: Financial Services and General Government
Overview
The highest-profile problems with the administration of the 2000 elections were in Florida—
where disputes about the vote count delayed resolution of the presidential race for weeks—but
post-election investigations revealed widespread problems with states’ conduct of elections.9
Those investigations also prompted suggestions about how to avoid similar problems in the
future, including proposals to increase federal involvement in elections.10
5 CNMI was not included in HAVA’s definition of “state” because it did not hold federal elections when HAVA was
enacted in 2002. Testimony of the Honorable Gregorio Kilili Camacho Sablan, in U.S. Congress, Committee on House
Administration, Subcommittee on Elections, Voting Rights and Election Administration in the U.S. Virgin Islands and
Other Territories, hearing, 116th Cong., 2nd sess., July 28, 2020, p. 2.
6 U.S. Election Assistance Commission, Fiscal Year 2023 Congressional Budget Justification, p. 3, at
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/cbj/US_EAC_FY_2023_Congressional_Budget_Justification_508_FINAL.pdf.
7 EAC, Fiscal Year 2023 Congressional Budget Justification, p. 3.
8 P.L. 117-328.
9 Andrew Glass, “Congress Certifies Bush as Winner of 2000 Election, Jan. 6, 2001,” Politico, January 6, 2016, at
https://www.politico.com/story/2016/01/congress-certifies-bush-as-winner-of-2000-election-jan-6-2001-217291.
10 See, for example, The National Commission on Federal Election Reform, To Assure Pride and Confidence in the
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The U.S. Election Assistance Commission: Overview and Selected Issues for Congress
Exactly what that involvement should look like was a matter of debate. There was general
agreement that it should include some federal assistance to states and localities. Proposals from
Members on both sides of the aisle and in both chambers of Congress would have authorized
election administration grant programs, for example, and federal guidance about voting systems.11
Members disagreed, however, about other aspects of federal involvement in elections. The
disagreements were rooted in part in competing concerns. Some Members worried that certain
types of involvement would shift the balance of election administration authority from the states
and localities that have traditionally run elections to the federal government.12 Others were
concerned that some states and localities would not—or could not—make necessary changes to
their election systems without federal intervention.13
Disagreements about the proper role of the federal government in elections played out in at least
two debates relevant to the EAC: (1) whether any new federal responsibilities should be assigned
to existing entities like the Federal Election Commission’s (FEC’s) Office of Election
Administration (OEA) or an entirely new agency, and (2) whether the new responsibilities should
focus solely on supporting states and localities or also include authority to compel them to act.14
Congress struck a compromise in HAVA by creating a new agency, the EAC, but positioning it as
a support agency. As one of the primary architects of HAVA, Representative Robert Ney, noted in
the markup of a 2001 version of the act,
[T]he name that we did choose, by the way, for this Commission is not an accident. The
purpose of this Commission is to assist State and local governments with their election
administration problems, basically taking the attitude we are the government, we are here
to help. Its purpose is not to dictate solutions or hand down bureaucratic mandates.15
That focus on assistance—in combination with other objectives, such as providing for a range of
expert input into agency activities and guarding against partisanship—informed the duties and
structure of the agency.
Duties
In keeping with its positioning as an assistance agency, the EAC’s rulemaking authority is
limited. HAVA explicitly restricts the agency’s authority to issue rules, regulations, and other
requirements for states or localities to regulations about two duties it transferred to the EAC from
the FEC: (1) reporting to Congress on the impact of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993
Electoral Process, August 2001, pp. 12-14, at http://web1.millercenter.org/commissions/comm_2001.pdf; and R.
Michael Alvarez et al., Voting—What Is, What Could Be, Caltech/MIT Voting Technology Project, July 2001, at
https://vote.caltech.edu/reports/1 (cited hereinafter as “R. Michael Alvarez et al., Voting—What Is, What Could Be”).
11 See, for example, H.R. 775 and S. 953 in the 107th Congress.
12 See, for example, Rep. Robert Ney, “House Agreement to the Conference Report on H.R. 3295 and H.Con.Res.
508,” House debate, Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148 (October 10, 2002), p. H7838; and Daniel J.
Palazzolo and Fiona R. McCarthy, “State and Local Government Organizations and the Formation of the Help America
Vote Act,” Publius, vol. 35, no. 4 (Autumn 2005), pp. 516-517, 525.
13 See, for example, U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, Election Reform: Volume 1,
hearings, 107th Cong., 1st sess., June 27, 2001, S.Hrg. 107-1036 (Washington: GPO, 2003), pp. 271, 348; and Palazzolo
and McCarthy, “State and Local Government Organizations and the Formation of the Help America Vote Act,” pp.
525-526.
14 See, for example, Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, Election Reform: Volume 1, pp. 21, 118, 227-228.
15 U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Mark up of H.R. 3295, the Help America Vote Act of 2001,
107th Cong., 1st sess., November 15, 2001 (Washington: GPO, 2003), p. 2.
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(NVRA; P.L. 103-31; 52 U.S.C. §§20501-20511), and (2) maintaining the federal mail voter
registration form required by the NVRA.16
That limitation does not mean that the agency has no ability to influence state or local action. The
EAC can audit its grantees, for example, and specify how issues identified by audits should be
addressed.17 It can revoke certification of voting systems to its voluntary guidelines and
accreditation of laboratories to test systems to the guidelines.18
However, its duties are primarily oriented toward facilitating or incentivizing elections activities
rather than compelling them. Those duties, which are designed for input by a range of elections
stakeholders, include administering the grant programs and voting system testing and certification
program referenced above. They also include issuing voluntary guidance for implementing
certain HAVA requirements, conducting elections research and sharing election administration
best practices, and establishing a youth voter participation and poll worker recruitment program.
Grant Programs
HAVA authorized the first major federal grant programs for election administration, and Congress
has established additional grant programs for certain limited elections-related purposes since. The
EAC has been charged with administering or helping administer the funding Congress has
provided for most of those grant programs, including funding for
Meeting election administration requirements. Title III of HAVA set requirements
for the administration of federal elections, including for voting systems, provisional
voting, voting information, and voter registration.19 Meeting those requirements
involved significant financial investments for many HAVA states, and Congress
authorized a requirements payments program primarily to help cover those costs. The
Military and Overseas Voter Empowerment (MOVE) Act of 2009, which set new
requirements for the voting and registration processes available to military and
overseas voters, authorized additional funding for the grant program to help HAVA
states meet its requirements.20
Making general improvements to election administration. The problems with the
administration of the 2000 elections varied by state.21 HAVA authorized a general
improvements grant program to help each HAVA state22 make the improvements to
16 52 U.S.C. §20508; and 52 U.S.C. §20929. For more on the NVRA, see CRS Report R45030, Federal Role in Voter
Registration: The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 and Subsequent Developments, by Sarah J. Eckman.
17 52 U.S.C. §21142. EAC, Audits & Resolutions, at https://www.eac.gov/payments-and-grants/audits-resolutions/.
18 52 U.S.C. §20971. State officials have used similar voting system certification and decertification authority to
compel action by local election officials. See, for example, Steven F. Huefner, Daniel P. Tokaji, and Edward B. Foley,
From Registration to Recounts: The Election Ecosystems of Five Midwestern States (Columbus, Ohio: The Ohio State
University Michael E. Moritz College of Law, 2007), p. 64.
19 52 U.S.C. §§21081-21083.
20 The MOVE Act was enacted as Subtitle H of Title V of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010
(P.L. 111-84). For more on UOCAVA and the MOVE Act, see CRS Report RS20764, The Uniformed and Overseas
Citizens Absentee Voting Act: Overview and Issues, by R. Sam Garrett.
21 See, for example, R. Michael Alvarez et al., Voting—What Is, What Could Be; and U.S. Government Accountability
Office, Elections: Perspectives on Activities and Challenges Across the Nation, GAO-02-3, October 2001, at
https://www.gao.gov/new.items/d023.pdf.
22 Some recent appropriations measures that have provided funding under this grant program have extended eligibility
for the funding to CNMI. See, for example, P.L. 117-328.
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its election administration processes it considered most pressing.23 Funding under the
program was authorized for use in making general improvements to the
administration of federal elections and various other specific purposes, including
providing voter education and poll worker training, acquiring and updating voting
systems, improving the accessibility of polling places, and establishing voter
hotlines.24
Replacing lever and punch card voting systems. The punch card voting systems
used by some jurisdictions in 2000 contributed to the problems with Florida’s vote
count.25 Post-election investigations also identified problems with lever voting
machines, such as the potential for levers to jam and the lack of a paper trail that
might be used to recover votes cast on a jammed machine.26 Congress authorized a
lever and punch card voting system replacement grant program to help HAVA states
replace both types of system.
Conducting election technology research. Issues with election technology, such as
the unreliability of lever and punch card voting systems, contributed to the problems
with the administration of the 2000 elections. In addition to helping HAVA states
replace unreliable systems, Congress authorized funding to help develop better
alternatives. It directed the EAC, with assistance from NIST, to oversee a voting
technology improvements research grant program for researching improvements to
election systems and a voting technology pilot program grant program for testing
new voting technologies.27
Encouraging youth voter participation and facilitating poll worker recruitment.
Young people participated in the 2000 elections at lower rates than their older
counterparts,28 and some of the problems with the conduct of the 2000 elections were
traced to a shortage of qualified poll workers.29 HAVA authorized grant-making under
two EAC programs to try to address one or both of those problems: a mock elections
grant program to encourage students and their parents to engage with the elections
process, and the Help America Vote College Program to encourage students at
institutions of higher education to serve as poll workers and election officials to use
23 The committee report for the House-passed version of HAVA said that a similar general purpose grant program it
would have authorized would “give states the opportunity to direct fund payments to the areas where the resources are
most needed. Jurisdictions that want to modernize their voting equipment can use election fund payments for that
purpose. Others may have more pressing needs for modernized statewide voter registration systems, or better
equipment and training of voters and poll workers.” U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Help
America Vote Act of 2001, report to accompany H.R. 3295, 107th Cong., 1st sess., December 10, 2001, H.Rept. 107-329
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2001), p. 34.
24 52 U.S.C. §20901.
25 Brooks Jackson, “Punch-Card Ballot Notorious for Inaccuracies,” CNN, November 15, 2000.
26 See, for example, R. Michael Alvarez et al., Voting—What Is, What Could Be.
27 52 U.S.C. §§21041-21043; and 52 U.S.C. §§21051-21053. The EAC has used funding provided for these grant
programs to conduct Accessible Voting Technology, Military Heroes, and Pre-Election Logic and Accuracy Testing
and Post-Election Audit initiatives. EAC, Discretionary Grants, at https://web.archive.org/web/20200622235023/
https://www.eac.gov/payments-and-grants/discretionary-grants/.
28 Thom File, Young-Adult Voting: An Analysis of Presidential Elections, 1964-2012, U.S. Census Bureau, April 2014,
p. 6, at https://www.census.gov/library/publications/2014/demo/p20-573.html.
29 See, for example, GAO, Elections: Perspectives on Activities and Challenges Across the Nation.
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their services.30 For more on the latter program, see the “Help America Vote College
Program” section of this report.
Improving the collection of election data. As described in the “Research and Best
Practices” section of this report, the EAC collects data from state and local election
officials after each regular federal general election. Congress found that the data
quality and response rates for early iterations of the survey were lower than expected
and established an election data collection grant program to help improve data
collection for the November 2008 election.31
For details of the funding Congress has authorized and appropriated for each of the above
purposes to date, see Table 1. For more on elections grant funding in general, see CRS Report
R46646, Election Administration: Federal Grant Funding for States and Localities, by Karen L.
Shanton; and CRS Report WPD00035, Federal Role in Elections Funding, by Karen L. Shanton.
Table 1. Funding Authorized and Appropriated for EAC Grant Programs
(Rounded, as of February 2023)
Authorization of
Summary of Primary
Grant Programs
Appropriationsa
Appropriationsb
Purpose
General improvements
$325.0 mil ion
FY2003:d
Making certain general
grant programc
FY2018: $380.0 millione
improvements to election
52 U.S.C. §§20901, 20903-
administration
FY2020: $825.0 mil ione, f
20906
FY2022: $75.0 mil ion
FY2023: $75.0 mil ion
Lever and punch card
$325.0 mil ion
FY2003:d
Replacing lever or punch
voting system
card voting systems in
replacement grant
precincts that used them
program
in the November 2000
52 U.S.C. §§20902-20906
federal election
Election data col ection
$10.0 mil ion
FY2008: $10.0 mil iong
Improving the col ection
grant program
of data related to the
52 U.S.C. §20981 note
November 2008 federal
election
Requirements payments
FY2003: $1.4 bil ion
FY2003: $830.0 mil ion
Complying with specified
programh
FY2004: $1.0 bil ion
FY2004: $1.5 bil ionj
requirements for the
52 U.S.C. §§21001-21008
administration of federal
FY2005: $600.0 mil ion
FY2008: $115.0 mil ion
elections
FY2010 and subsequent
FY2009: $100.0 mil ion
fiscal years: Such sums as
FY2010: $70.0 mil ion
may be necessaryi
FY2011:k
30 HAVA also authorized another initiative to encourage youth voter participation: the Help America Vote Foundation.
Some EAC appropriations have been designated for the foundation, but HAVA did not assign the EAC an official role
in its operations. Also, although nominees were named to the foundation’s board of directors in July 2004, CRS has not
been able to locate additional information about its activities. The White House, “Personnel Announcement,” press
release, July 9, 2004, at https://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2004/07/text/20040709-6.html.
31 52 U.S.C. §20981 note. U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, House Appropriations Committee
Print: Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 (H.R. 2764; P.L. 110-161), committee print, 110th Cong., 1st sess., p.
893.
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Authorization of
Summary of Primary
Grant Programs
Appropriationsa
Appropriationsb
Purpose
Voting technology
FY2003: $20.0 mil ion
FY2009: $5.0 mil ion
Researching
improvements research
FY2010: $3.0 mil ion
improvements to election
grant program
systems
52 U.S.C. §§21041-21043
Voting technology pilot
FY2003: $10.0 mil ion
FY2009: $1.0 mil ion
Conducting pilot
program grant program
FY2010: $2.0 mil ion
programs to test new
52 U.S.C. §§21051-21053
voting technologies
Mock elections grant
FY2003: $200,000
FY2004: $200,000l
Conducting voter
program
Subsequent six fiscal
FY2005: $200,000l
education activities for
52 U.S.C. §§21071-21072
years: Such sums as may
students and their parents
FY2008: $200,000g
be necessary
FY2009: $300,000
FY2010: $300,000
Help America Vote
FY2003: $5.0 mil ion
FY2003: $1.5 mil ion
Encouraging col ege
Col ege Program
Subsequent fiscal years:
FY2004: $750,000l
students to serve as pol
52 U.S.C. §§21121-21123
Such sums as may be
workers and election
FY2005: $200,000l
necessarym
officials to use their
FY2006:n
services
FY2008: $750,000l
FY2009: $750,000
FY2010: $750,000
FY2023: $1.0 mil ion
Sources: CRS, based on review of the U.S. Code and relevant appropriations measures.
Notes:
a. Authorized amounts are listed here as they are presented in statutory language.
b. Appropriations figures do not account for rescissions or sequestration reductions.
c. The Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA) lists the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) as the
administrator for its general improvements and lever and punch card voting system replacement grant
programs (52 U.S.C. §§20901-20906), but the act names the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) the
administrator of that funding for purposes of audits and repayments (52 U.S.C. §21142) and Congress has
assigned responsibility for administering recent funding under the general improvements grant program to
the EAC.
d. The Consolidated Appropriations Resolution, 2003 (P.L. 108-7) provided $650 mil ion for the general
improvements and lever and punch card voting system replacement grant programs without specifying a
distribution of the funds between the two programs. The legislation indicated that some of the funding—not
to exceed $500,000—was to be available to GSA for expenses associated with administering the funds.
e. The $380 mil ion appropriated under this program for FY2018 was provided by the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141), and $425 mil ion of the $825 mil ion appropriated for FY2020 was
provided by the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (P.L. 116-93). Explanatory statements
accompanying those two appropriations acts listed some election security-specific purposes for which the
funds could be used. For differences between the general improvements grant program as authorized by
HAVA and the FY2018 and FY2020 funds, see CRS Report R46646, Election Administration: Federal Grant
Funding for States and Localities, by Karen L. Shanton.
f.
This figure includes $425 mil ion from the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020, and $400 mil ion from
the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act (P.L. 116-136). The CARES Act restricted
use of its HAVA funds to preventing, preparing for, and responding to coronavirus, domestically and
internationally, in the 2020 federal election cycle. For other differences between the general improvements
grant program as authorized by HAVA and the FY2020 and CARES Act funds, see CRS Report R46646,
Election Administration: Federal Grant Funding for States and Localities, by Karen L. Shanton.
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g. Report language accompanying the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 (P.L. 110-161) indicated that
$112,500 of the funding the act provided for EAC Salaries and Expenses was for administrative expenses
associated with the election data collection and mock elections grant programs.
h. The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2004 (P.L. 108-199) authorized GSA to make requirements
payments while the EAC was being established but provided for expiration of that authority by the earlier of
(1) June 30, 2004, or (2) the end of the three-month period after the appointment of all members of the
EAC.
i.
Appropriations for the requirements payments program for FY2010 and subsequent fiscal years were
authorized only for complying with requirements established by the Military and Overseas Voter
Empowerment (MOVE) Act of 2009 (52 U.S.C. §21001).
j.
The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2004 (P.L. 108-199) indicated that some of this funding—not to
exceed $100,000—was to be transferred to GSA for expenses associated with administering the funds.
Report language accompanying the act (H.Rept. 108-401) indicated that $750,000 of the funding was for the
Help America Vote Foundation, $750,000 was for the Help America Vote Col ege Program, and $200,000
was for the National Student Parent Mock Election.
k. HAVA required states that had not replaced all of their lever and punch card voting systems by a certain
deadline to return some of the funds they received under the lever and punch card voting system
replacement grant program and directed the EAC to redistribute the returned funds as requirements
payments. The EAC made some funding for requirements payments available for FY2011 from returned
funds. EAC, Memorandum Re: 2011 Requirements Payments Disbursements, May 13, 2014, at
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/6/
Instructions_for_Requesting_FY_2011_Requirements_Payments_Memo.2014.pdf.
l.
These figures are from appropriations report language rather than bil text.
m. The amounts listed here are for the Help America Vote Col ege Program as a whole. Grant-making is one
of a number of activities, including developing materials and sponsoring seminars and workshops, that
HAVA authorizes the EAC to conduct as part of the program (52 U.S.C. §21122).
n. The joint explanatory statement accompanying the FY2006 appropriations act (H.Rept. 109-307; P.L. 109-
115) stated that the conferees encouraged the EAC to apply $250,000 of the funding it received for Salaries
and Expenses to the Help America Vote Col ege Program.
The EAC’s grant programs were not originally designed—and have not historically functioned—
as ongoing sources of new elections funding. Congress has returned to some of them on occasion,
however, in response to new developments. For example, it has appropriated funding under
HAVA’s general improvements grant program for recent fiscal years in response to foreign efforts
to interfere in the 2016 elections and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in the 2020 election
cycle.
The EAC also continues to manage some HAVA grant funding appropriated for previous fiscal
years. Most of the funding Congress has provided under HAVA’s requirements payments program
and general improvements grant program has been available to states until expended, so the EAC
continues to provide technical assistance and receive spending reports for some of those funds.32
HAVA also authorizes the EAC to audit its grantees and, on a vote of the commission, recipients
of other grant funding authorized by the act.33 For more on those audits, see the “Office of
Inspector General (OIG)” section of this report.
Voting System Guidelines, Testing, and Certification
States and localities choose the voting systems used in U.S. elections, but the federal government
offers some guidance. The first set of voluntary federal guidelines for voting systems was issued
32 See, for example, EAC, 2021 Grant Expenditure Report, October 1, 2020 - September 30, 2021, July 2022, p. 3, at
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/paymentgrants/expenditures/
EAC_2021_Grant_Expenditure_Report_FINAL.pdf.
33 52 U.S.C. §21142.
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by the FEC in 1990 in response to the increased complexity—and new problems—introduced by
use of computerized systems for vote casting and counting.34 The National Association of State
Election Directors (NASED), a professional association for state election officials, developed a
program to test and qualify voting systems to the FEC’s guidelines.35
Following the reports of problems with voting systems in 2000, Congress transferred the FEC’s
and NASED’s responsibilities to the new elections agency it created in HAVA. One of the EAC’s
statutory advisory bodies is responsible for helping the agency’s executive director develop draft
Voluntary Voting System Guidelines (VVSG), with technical assistance from NIST.36 The draft
VVSG are then made available to the EAC’s other two statutory advisory bodies and the public
for review and comment before they are submitted to the commissioners for a vote on adoption.37
The EAC’s commissioners are also charged with providing for testing and certification of voting
systems to the VVSG. With input from NIST, which is responsible for monitoring and providing
recommendations about voting system test laboratories (VSTLs), the commission accredits and
can revoke accreditation of labs to test systems to the VVSG. It also provides for certification,
decertification, and recertification of systems to the guidelines.38
The commission has adopted three versions of the VVSG to date: VVSG 1.0 in 2005, VVSG 1.1
in 2015, and VVSG 2.0 in 2021.39 The most recent iteration of the guidelines is divided into
higher-level principles and guidelines and more detailed information voting system vendors and
VSTLs can use to guide development and testing of systems to the high-level principles and
guidelines.40 Vendors who are interested in having voting systems federally certified must comply
34 Federal Election Commission, Performance and Test Standards for Punchcard, Marksense, and Direct Recording
Electronic Voting Systems, January 1990, pp. xvii-xviii, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/28/
FEC_1990_Voting_System_Standards1.pdf.
35 EAC, Voluntary Voting System Guidelines, at https://www.eac.gov/voting-equipment/voluntary-voting-system-
guidelines/; and U.S. Congress, House Committee on Science, Voting Technology Standards Act of 2001, report to
accompany H.R. 2275, 107th Cong., 1st sess., October 31, 2001, H.Rept. 107-263 (Washington: GPO, 2001), p. 5.
36 52 U.S.C. §20961.
37 52 U.S.C. §20962.
38 52 U.S.C. §20961; and 52 U.S.C. §20971. According to the EAC’s voting system testing and certification manual,
certification decisions are made by the executive director of the EAC or the executive director’s designee and subject to
appeal to an Appeal Authority consisting of two or more commissioners or commission appointees. EAC, Voting
System Testing and Certification Program Manual, Version 3.0, pp. 38-47, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/
TestingCertification/Testing_and_Certification_Program_Manual_Version_3_020421.pdf.
39 EAC, “EAC Adopts 2005 Voluntary Voting System Guidelines,” press release, December 3, 2005, at
https://web.archive.org/web/20170327213819/https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/28/VVSG_1.0_Press_Release.pdf; EAC,
“EAC Updates Federal Voting System Guidelines,” press release, March 31, 2015, at https://web.archive.org/web/
20170327213732/https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/28/
EAC%20Updates%20Federal%20Voting%20System%20Guidelines-News-Release-FINAL-3-31-15-website.pdf;
EAC, “U.S. Election Assistance Commission Adopts New Voluntary Voting System Guidelines 2.0,” press release,
February 10, 2021, at https://www.eac.gov/news/2021/02/10/us-election-assistance-commission-adopts-new-voluntary-
voting-system-guidelines-20.
40 As noted in the “Efforts to Terminate” section of this report, loss of a quorum of EAC commissioners has delayed
updates to the VVSG. The divided structure described here was proposed as a way to prevent future delays; authority to
adopt and modify the higher-level principles and guidelines was to be reserved to the commissioners, while the more
detailed information could be updated by agency staff. That division of responsibilities between the EAC’s
commissioners and its professional staff was not ultimately implemented, due to an internal legal opinion questioning
its permissibility under HAVA. National Association of State Election Directors, NASED Executive Board Comment on
the Voluntary Voting System Guidelines, May 3, 2019, at https://www.nased.org/news/2019/5/3/comment-on-the-vvsg;
and EAC, Technical Guidelines Development Committee Meeting, September 19, 2019, p. 42, at https://www.eac.gov/
sites/default/files/2020-01/EAC09192019VerbatimTGDC%20%282%29.pdf.
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with certain requirements, such as providing information about their policies and ownership and
agreeing to permit visits to their manufacturing facilities and report certain modifications and
malfunctions of their systems.41
Use of voting systems that have been certified to the VVSG is voluntary under federal law.
However, states can require federal testing or certification of the voting systems they use, and
many have chosen to do so. According to a September 2020 report from the EAC, DC and 37 of
the 50 states have made some or all of the federal testing and certification program mandatory
under their own state laws.42
Some states have also chosen to require similar testing or certification at the state level of other
systems used in elections, such as electronic poll books (e-poll books) used for voter check-in.43
Those nonvoting systems are not covered by the federal testing and certification program, which
is limited to voting systems, but the EAC has taken some steps to offer states guidance about
them. It launched a partnership with the Center for Internet Security (CIS) in 2020 to pilot a
process for testing nonvoting election systems, including e-poll books and election night
reporting systems.44
Voluntary Guidance
In addition to providing for voluntary federal guidelines for voting systems, HAVA set some
requirements voting systems used in federal elections have to meet. Title III of the act requires
HAVA states to set uniform standards for what counts as a vote on each type of voting system
they use for federal elections. It also requires the voting systems they use in federal elections to
satisfy various criteria, including offering voters the opportunity to check and correct their
ballots, producing a manually auditable permanent paper record, providing for accessibility to
individuals with disabilities and members of language minority groups, and meeting specified
error rate standards.45
Title III of HAVA also set requirements for other aspects of the administration of federal
elections, including provisional voting, voting information, voter identification, and voter
registration. Election officials in HAVA states are required to post certain information at the polls
41 EAC, Manufacturer Registration Application, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/TestingCertification/
Manufacturer_Registration_Application_EAC_001C_0820.pdf.
42 EAC, State Requirements and the U.S. Election Assistance Commission Voting System Testing and Certification
Program, September 4, 2020, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/TestingCertification/
State_Requirements_for_Certification09042020.pdf.
43 National Conference of State Legislatures, Electronic Poll Books, October 25, 2019, at https://www.ncsl.org/
research/elections-and-campaigns/electronic-pollbooks.aspx.
44 EAC, “U.S. Election Assistance Commission and the Center for Internet Security Partner on Non-Voting Election
Technology Verification Pilot Program,” press release, June 17, 2020, at https://www.eac.gov/news/2020/06/17/us-
election-assistance-commission-and-center-internet-security-partner-non-voting. CIS also operates the Elections
Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center (EI-ISAC) as part of a collaboration with the U.S. Department
of Homeland Security’s (DHS’s) Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and Election Infrastructure
Subsector Government Coordinating Council (EIS GCC). Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Election
Infrastructure Security Resource Guide, May 2019, pp. 3-4, at https://www.cisa.gov/sites/default/files/publications/
19_0531_cisa_election-security-resources-guide-may-2019.pdf.
45 52 U.S.C. §21081. For more on these and other HAVA requirements, see CRS Report R46949, The Help America
Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA): Overview and Ongoing Role in Election Administration Policy, by Karen L. Shanton.
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and offer certain voters the opportunity to cast a provisional ballot, for example, and HAVA states
have to maintain centralized, computerized statewide voter registration databases.46
HAVA reserved decisions about exactly how to comply with the new requirements to the HAVA
states but directed the EAC to issue voluntary guidance about them.47 The guidance was intended
to offer more specifics about how to implement the act’s general mandates. The EAC’s guidance
about statewide voter registration databases, for example, indicated that either a “top-down”
system, in which a centrally located database is connected to local terminals, or a “bottom-up”
system, in which information from locally hosted databases is used to update a central list, is
acceptable under the law.48
Research and Best Practices
The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (FECA; P.L. 92-225; 52 U.S.C. §§30101-30146)
charged the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO; now known as the U.S. Government
Accountability Office) with maintaining a clearinghouse of election administration research.49
The 1974 amendment to the act (P.L. 93-443) created the FEC, which inherited the clearinghouse
function and assigned it to its OEA.50
HAVA transferred the OEA’s clearinghouse responsibilities—along with its staff and funding—to
the EAC.51 The EAC has broad authority under the act to conduct elections research and share
election administration best practices, and it has used that authority both to collect data of
ongoing interest and to address particular developments.52 The agency includes a section on state
elections policies in its biennial Election Administration and Voting Survey (EAVS),53 for
example, and has produced resources to help election officials respond to foreign efforts to
interfere in the 2016 elections, elections effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a reported
increase in threats to election workers during and since 2020.54
46 52 U.S.C. §§21082-21083.
47 52 U.S.C. §21085; and 52 U.S.C. §§21101-21102.
48 EAC, Voluntary Guidance on Implementation of Statewide Voter Registration Lists, July 2005, pp. 6-7, at
https://web.archive.org/web/20170328070125/https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/1/
Implementing%20Statewide%20Voter%20Registration%20Lists.pdf.
49 For more on FECA, see CRS Report R41542, The State of Campaign Finance Policy: Recent Developments and
Issues for Congress, by R. Sam Garrett. The U.S. General Accounting Office was renamed the U.S. Government
Accountability Office in 2004. GAO, 100 Years of GAO, at https://www.gao.gov/about/what-gao-does/hundred-years-
of-gao.
50 For more on the FEC, see CRS Report R44318, The Federal Election Commission: Overview and Selected Issues for
Congress, by R. Sam Garrett. The OEA was originally known as the National Clearinghouse on Election
Administration. Robert S. Montjoy and Douglas M. Chapin, “The U.S. Election Assistance Commission: What Role in
the Administration of Elections?” Publius, vol. 35, no. 4 (Autumn 2005), p. 620; and FEC, Twenty Year Report, April
1995, p. 8, at https://www.fec.gov/resources/about-fec/reports/20year.pdf.
51 52 U.S.C. §§21131-21133. EAC, History of the National Clearinghouse on Election Administration, at
https://web.archive.org/web/20170328053335/https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/28/
History%20of%20the%20National%20Clearinghouse%20on%20Election%20Administration.pdf.
52 52 U.S.C. §20981.
53 For more on the EAVS, see CRS In Focus IF11266, The Election Administration and Voting Survey: Overview and
2018 Findings, by Karen L. Shanton.
54 See, for example, EAC, Studies and Reports, at https://www.eac.gov/research-and-data/studies-and-reports; EAC,
Election Security, at https://www.eac.gov/voters/election-security; EAC, Coronavirus (COVID-19) Resources, at
https://www.eac.gov/election-officials/coronavirus-covid-19-resources; and EAC, Election Official Security, at
https://www.eac.gov/election-officials/election-official-security.
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HAVA also assigned the EAC some specific research projects. It charged the agency with
conducting studies of
military and overseas voting, in consultation with the U.S. Department of Defense
(DOD);
human factor research, in consultation with NIST;
mail voter registration and, in consultation with the Social Security Administration
(SSA), use of Social Security numbers for voter registration or election eligibility or
identification purposes;
electronic voting and the electoral process; and
free postage for absentee ballots, in consultation with the U.S. Postal Service
(USPS).55
The EAVS also includes congressionally mandated reporting on voter registration and military
and overseas voting, in addition to the EAC-initiated section on state elections policies.56
Help America Vote College Program
As noted in the “Grant Programs” section of this report, Congress identified challenges with
youth voter participation and poll worker recruitment in the 2000 elections. It responded in part
by directing the EAC to establish a program to encourage students at institutions of higher
education to serve as poll workers and election officials to use their services.
HAVA authorizes the EAC to conduct various activities as part of that program, including
developing materials, sponsoring seminars and workshops, producing advertisements directed at
students, and awarding grants. To date, the agency has primarily used funding appropriated for
the program for grant-making.57
Relationship of the EAC to Other Federal Entities
Federal agency support for the general administration of elections at the time of the 2000 elections was primarily
provided by the FEC’s OEA. Fol owing the enactment of HAVA and transfer of the OEA’s duties, staff, and funding
to the EAC, however, the FEC no longer plays a role in election administration. Although the FEC and EAC both
work on elections-related issues and share some structural similarities, they have different authorities and
mandates—the FEC is a regulatory agency that focuses on campaign finance, while the EAC is a nonregulatory
agency that covers election administration—and they do not generally work together.
The EAC does work closely with other parts of the federal government, however. Multiple federal agencies are
represented on its advisory bodies, and some provide additional assistance with its work. The agency’s Board of
Advisors includes representatives of DOD, the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance (Access)
Board, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights (USCCR), and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), for example, and
NIST assists the EAC with some of its research, grant-making, and voting system testing and certification
responsibilities.
The EAC also provides election administration expertise to other federal agencies directly and through
congressional testimony and col aborates with them on responses to election administration developments.
Fol owing the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS’s) designation of election systems as critical
55 52 U.S.C. §§20982-20986.
56 52 U.S.C. §20508; and 52 U.S.C. §20302. See also EAC, Studies and Reports, at https://www.eac.gov/research-and-
data/studies-and-reports.
57 EAC, Help America Vote College Program, at https://www.eac.gov/payments_and_grants/
help_america_vote_college_program.
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infrastructure in January 2017, for example, the EAC helped establish and continues to participate in the
department’s new Election Infrastructure Subsector (EIS).58
For more on federal involvement in election administration, see CRS Report R45302, Federal Role in U.S.
Campaigns and Elections: An Overview, by R. Sam Garrett.
Structure
The EAC consists of an appointed commission, a professional staff led by an executive director
and general counsel, an OIG, three statutory advisory bodies, and one agency-created advisory
body. Its primary oversight committees are the Committee on House Administration and the
Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, and its appropriations are under the jurisdiction
of the Financial Services and General Government (FSGG) Subcommittees of the House and
Senate Appropriations Committees.59
The structure of the EAC, like its duties, reflects its emphasis on assistance.60 The agency’s
advisory bodies are central to its functioning, with opportunities for input into its guidance,
planning, and staffing. Voters are represented on one of the advisory bodies, and state officials,
local officials, or their representatives make up some or all of the membership of all four.
The EAC was also set up to ensure a range of expert input into agency activities and help guard
against partisanship.61 In addition to voters and state and local officials, for example, the advisory
bodies include experts in a range of other fields relevant to election administration, from
disability access to science and technology. The membership and selection processes for the
commission and some of the advisory bodies, as well as a provision that certain actions require
approval by a three-vote quorum of the four commissioners, are also designed for partisan
balance.
Commission
The EAC’s commission is designed to have four members, each of whom is required to have
elections experience or expertise and no more than two of whom may be affiliated with the same
political party. Candidates for the commission are recommended by the majority or minority
58 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Statement by Secretary Jeh Johnson on the Designation of Election
Infrastructure as a Critical Infrastructure Subsector, January 6, 2017, at https://www.dhs.gov/news/2017/01/06/
statement-secretary-johnson-designation-election-infrastructure-critical. For more on the critical infrastructure
designation, see CRS In Focus IF10677, The Designation of Election Systems as Critical Infrastructure, by Brian E.
Humphreys.
59 52 U.S.C. §20927. See also U.S. Congress, House, Rules of the House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventeenth
Congress, prepared by Clerk of the House of Representatives, 117th Cong., July 19, 2022, p. 12; U.S. Congress, Senate
Committee on Rules and Administration, Standing Rules of the Senate, 113th Cong., 1st sess., November 4, 2013,
S.Doc. 113-18 (Washington: GPO, 2013), p. 26; and U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations,
Subcommittee Jurisdiction, committee print, 110th Cong., 1st sess., January 16, 2007 (Washington: GPO, 2007), p. 5.
60 See, for example, Rep. Robert Ney, “House Agreement to the Conference Report on H.R. 3295 and H.Con.Res.
508,” House debate, Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148 (October 10, 2002), p. H7838.
61 See, for example, Sen. John McCain, “Senate Consideration of S. 565, Consideration and Passage of H.R. 3295 with
Amendments, and Return to the Calendar of S. 565. Senate Insistence on Its Amendments to H.R. 3295, Request for a
Conference, and Appointment of Conferees,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148
(April 11, 2002), p. S2527.
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leadership of the House or Senate and appointed by the President subject to the advice and
consent of the Senate.62
HAVA provides for commissioners to be appointed to four-year terms on staggered two-year
cycles.63 They may be reappointed to up to one additional term and continue to serve on
“holdover” status after their terms expire, pending appointment of a successor. Two
commissioners representing different parties are to be chosen by the commission’s membership
each year to serve one-year terms as chair and vice chair.64
Action on activities the commission is authorized by HAVA to conduct requires approval by a
three-vote quorum of the commissioners.65 That quorum requirement applies to most of the
agency’s major activities, from updating the VVSG to promulgating regulations for the NVRA-
mandated voter registration reports and federal mail voter registration form to appointing the
agency’s statutory officers.66
62 52 U.S.C. §20923.
63 Two of the original members of the commission were appointed to two-year terms rather than four-year terms to
allow for staggering of member tenures. 52 U.S.C. §20923.
64 52 U.S.C. §20923.
65 52 U.S.C. §20928. This is similar to the FEC’s commission, which also has an even number of members, no more
than half of whom may share a party and a majority of whose votes are required for certain types of action. For more on
the structure of the FEC’s commission, see CRS Report R45160, Federal Election Commission: Membership and
Policymaking Quorum, In Brief, by R. Sam Garrett.
66 The “Efforts to Terminate” section of this report describes delays in EAC action caused by lack of a quorum at the
commission. Because the commission is bipartisan and has an even number of members, there is also potential for it
not to take action when it does have enough members for a quorum. In 2006, for example, the commission deadlocked
2-2 along party lines over whether to change the state instructions on Arizona’s version of the federal mail voter
registration form to reflect state voters’ approval of a proof of citizenship requirement for voter registration. Jennifer
Nou, “Sub-Regulating Elections,” The Supreme Court Review, vol. 2013, no. 1 (January 2014), pp. 139-141.
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Figure 1. EAC Organizational Chart
(As of FY2023)
Source: CRS, based on EAC, Fiscal Year 2023 Congressional Budget Justification, p. 8, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/
default/files/cbj/US_EAC_FY_2023_Congressional_Budget_Justification_508_FINAL.pdf.
Professional Staff
The EAC has two statutory officers—an executive director and a general counsel—who are
appointed by the commission with input in the case of the executive director from two of the
agency’s advisory bodies. Both the executive director and the general counsel are appointed to
four-year terms and eligible for reappointment.67
HAVA authorizes the executive director of the EAC to hire other professional staff (see Figure 1
for an organizational chart of the agency as of FY2023).68 As a matter of agency policy, the
executive director is also responsible for the day-to-day operations of the EAC, including
preparing policy recommendations for consideration by the commissioners, implementing
adopted policies, and handling administrative affairs.69
The size of the EAC’s staff has varied, from the four commissioners and handful of transfers
from OEA in FY2004 to 50 full-time equivalent positions (FTEs) in FY2010, about 25 to 30
FTEs between FY2013 and FY2020, and 46 FTEs in FY2021.70 The number of FTEs at the
67 52 U.S.C. §20924.
68 52 U.S.C. §20924.
69 EAC, Organizational Management Policy Statement, February 24, 2015, p. 2, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/
files/eac_assets/1/28/EAC%20Organizational%20Management%20Policy%20Statement%20-%20Adopted%202-24-
15.pdf.
70 EAC, Fiscal Year 2004 Annual Report, January 2005, p. 7, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/
document_library/files/FY_2004_Annual_Report.pdf; EAC, Fiscal Year 2011 Congressional Budget Justification,
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agency was capped at 22 in FY2005 and 23 in FY2006.71 The cap was lifted for FY2007 and, as
of this writing, has not been reinstated.72
Advisory Bodies
HAVA provided for three advisory bodies for the EAC: the Board of Advisors, the Standards
Board, and the Technical Guidelines Development Committee (TGDC). In 2021, the EAC used
its own authority to add a fourth advisory body, the Local Leadership Council (LLC).73
Board of Advisors
The EAC’s Board of Advisors is charged with reviewing draft VVSG and voluntary guidance
before they are presented to the agency’s commissioners for a vote on adoption.74 HAVA directs
the board to appoint a search committee in the event of a vacancy for executive director of the
EAC and the commissioners to consider the candidates the search committee recommends.75 The
commissioners are also supposed to consult with the board on research, program goals, and long-
term planning, and NIST is supposed to consult with it on monitoring and review of VSTLs.76
The Board of Advisors was designed by HAVA to have 37 members, but its membership dropped
to 35 with the 2016 merger of two of the organizations responsible for appointing its members.77
February 1, 2010, p. 5, at https://web.archive.org/web/20170328074236/https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/6/157.PDF;
EAC, Fiscal Year 2015 Interim Congressional Budget Justification, March 10, 2014, p. 5, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/
default/files/eac_assets/1/6/FY_2015_CBJ_March_4,_2014_FINAL.pdf; EAC, Fiscal Year 2017 Congressional
Budget Justification, February 9, 2016, p. 5, at https://web.archive.org/web/20171221003454/https://www.eac.gov/
assets/1/6/FY_2017_CBJ_Feb_9_2016_FINAL.pdf; EAC, Fiscal Year 2019 Congressional Budget Justification,
February 12, 2018, p. 4, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/6/
FY_2019_CBJ_Feb_12_2018_FINAL.pdf; EAC, Fiscal Year 2020 Congressional Budget Justification, p. 5, at
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/6/EACFY2020BudgetJustification.pdf; EAC, Fiscal Year 2021
Congressional Budget Justification, February 10, 2020, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/28/
EACFY2021CBJ.pdf; and EAC, Fiscal Year 2023 Congressional Budget Justification, p. 3.
71 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Making Appropriations for Foreign Operations, Export
Financing, and Related Programs for the Fiscal Year Ending September 30, 2005, and For Other Purposes, conference
report to accompany H.R. 4818, 108th Cong., 2nd sess., November 20, 2004, H.Rept. 108-792 (Washington: GPO,
2004), p. 1452; U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Making Appropriations for the Departments of
Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Development, the Judiciary, District of Columbia, and Independent
Agencies for the Fiscal Year Ending September 30, 2006, and for Other Purposes, conference report to accompany
H.R. 3058, 109th Cong., 1st sess., November 18, 2005, H.Rept. 109-307 (Washington: GPO, 2005), pp. 284-285. The
EAC indicated in a 2007 oversight hearing that, due to misunderstandings about FTE classifications, staffing exceeded
the cap during this period. U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Subcommittee on Elections, Oversight
Hearing on the Election Assistance Commission, hearing, 110th Cong., 1st sess., August 2, 2007 (Washington: GPO,
2007), p. 178.
72 U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Subcommittee on Elections, Election Assistance Commission
Operations and 2012 Budget Proposal, hearing, 112th Cong., 1st sess., March 17, 2011 (Washington: GPO, 2011), p. 2.
A bill introduced in the 117th Congress, the American Confidence in Elections (ACE) Act (H.R. 8528), would have
amended HAVA to cap the number of FTEs at the EAC and its OIG.
73 EAC, Local Leadership Council, at https://www.eac.gov/about-eac/local-leadership-council.
74 52 U.S.C. §20942; and 52 U.S.C. §20962.
75 52 U.S.C. §20924.
76 52 U.S.C. §20987; 52 U.S.C. §20924; and 52 U.S.C. §20971.
77 The National Association of County Recorders, Election Officials, and Clerks and the International Association of
Clerks, Recorders, Election Officials, and Treasurers merged to form the International Association of Government
Officials. Doug Chapin, “Fewer Letters in the Alphabet Soup: NACRC, IACREOT to Merge,” Election Academy, July
7, 2015, at http://editions.lib.umn.edu/electionacademy/2015/07/07/fewer-letters-in-the-alphabet-soup-nacrc-iacreot-to-
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Sixteen members of the board are appointed by organizations that represent state and local
officials,78 and seven represent federal entities.79 Four members are science and technology
experts, who are each appointed by the majority or minority leadership of the House or Senate.
The remaining eight members of the board represent voters, with two appointed by each of the
chairs and ranking members of the EAC’s two primary oversight committees. The overall
membership of the board is supposed to be bipartisan and geographically representative.80
Standards Board
HAVA assigned the Standards Board and its nine-member Executive Board the same duties as the
Board of Advisors. Like the Board of Advisors, the full Standards Board is responsible for
reviewing draft voluntary guidance and VVSG; appointing a search committee in the event of a
vacancy for the executive director; consulting with the commission on research, program goals,
and long-term planning; and consulting with NIST on monitoring and review of VSTLs. The
Executive Board is charged with reviewing draft VVSG and making recommendations about
them to the full board, as well as carrying out any other duties the full board delegates to it.81
The full Standards Board has 110 members. They include two representatives from each of the 50
states, DC, American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Each pair of
representatives includes one state election official and one local election official who are not
affiliated with the same political party. State election officials are chosen for membership on the
board by their state’s chief election official, and local officials are selected according to a process
overseen by the chief state election official.82
The nine members of the Executive Board are appointed to two-year terms by the full
membership of the Standards Board. Executive Board members may serve no more than three
consecutive terms, and no more than five Executive Board members may be either state officials,
local officials, or members of the same political party.83
Technical Guidelines Development Committee (TGDC)
The 15-member TGDC is charged with helping the executive director of the EAC develop the
VVSG.84 That has tended to involve working with NIST to draft guidelines for consideration by
the other two statutory advisory bodies, the public, and the commission.
The director of NIST serves as chair of the TGDC and, in collaboration with the EAC’s
commissioners, appoints its other 14 members. Appointees to the TGDC must include an equal
merge/.
78 Two of the state and local representatives are appointed by each of the Election Center, the International Association
of Government Officials, the National Association of Counties, the National Association of Secretaries of State,
NASED, the National Conference of State Legislatures, the National Governors Association, and the United States
Conference of Mayors. 52 U.S.C. §20944.
79 The federal representatives are the director of DOD’s Federal Voting Assistance Program, the chief of DOJ’s Office
of Public Integrity or the chief’s designee, the chief of the Voting Section of DOJ’s Civil Rights Division or the chief’s
designee, and two members appointed by each of the Access Board and USCCR. 52 U.S.C. §20944.
80 52 U.S.C. §20944.
81 52 U.S.C. §20962; and 52 U.S.C. §20943.
82 52 U.S.C. §20943.
83 Three of the original members of the Executive Board were limited to one term and three were limited to two terms
to allow for staggering of member tenures. 52 U.S.C. §20943.
84 52 U.S.C. §20961.
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number of members of the Board of Advisors, Standards Board, and Access Board; one
representative of each of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE); two representatives of NASED who do not serve on
the Board of Advisors or Standards Board and do not share a political party; and other experts in
voting system-related science and technology.85
Local Leadership Council (LLC)
The LLC was established by the EAC in 2021 to provide input into the agency’s work, such as by
offering recommendations and sharing experiences and best practices.86 A primary motivation for
creating the council, according to agency leadership, was to help the EAC build direct
relationships with local election officials.87
The council consists of two local election officials from each of the 50 states. Where applicable,
the members are supposed to be current or former leaders of professional associations for local
election officials in their states.88
Office of Inspector General (OIG)
The EAC is required to have an OIG under the Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended by
HAVA (IG Act; P.L. 95-452; 5 U.S.C. app.).89 As noted in the “Grant Programs” section of this
report, the EAC’s OIG audits its grantees and refers issues identified in audits to agency
management for resolution.90 In one instance, for example, the OIG determined that a grantee
could not document certain grant expenses, and the grantee was required to return some of its
grant funds.91
The EAC’s OIG also conducts internal audits and investigations of the agency itself. That
includes regular reporting on the EAC’s management challenges and compliance with federal
laws, such as the Federal Information Security Modernization Act of 2014 (FISMA; P.L. 113-283;
44 U.S.C. §§3551-3559). It also includes audits of the EAC’s finances and investigation of
complaints about fraud, waste, mismanagement, or abuse at the agency, such as a 2008
investigation of alleged political bias in preparation of an EAC report about voter fraud and
intimidation, a 2010 investigation of complaints about the agency’s work environment, and a
2015 investigation of reports of disbursement of expired grant funds.92
85 52 U.S.C. §20961.
86 EAC, Local Leadership Council, at https://www.eac.gov/about-eac/local-leadership-council.
87 EAC, 2022 Board of Advisors Annual Meeting, at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_q0wjZD1l4E.
88 EAC, Charter of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission Local Leadership Council, p. 2, at https://www.eac.gov/
sites/default/files/LLC/EAC_Local_Leadership_Council_Charter.pdf.
89 5 U.S.C. app. §8G. For more on inspectors general, see CRS Report R45450, Statutory Inspectors General in the
Federal Government: A Primer, by Ben Wilhelm.
90 EAC, Audits & Resolutions. The EAC can also use suspension and debarment procedures to limit access to future
EAC grants or payments by certain grantees who handle funds improperly. 2 C.F.R. §5800.
91 U.S. Election Assistance Commission, EAC Management Decision: Resolution of the OIG Audit Report on the
Administration of Grant Funds Received Under the Help America Vote College Program by Project Vote, November
24, 2010, p. 3, at https://web.archive.org/web/20170328070206/https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/28/
Final%20EAC%20Management%20Decision%20Project%20Vote%20E-HP-SP-05-10.pdf; and Committee on House
Administration, Subcommittee on Elections, Election Assistance Commission Operations and 2012 Budget Proposal, p.
121.
92 EAC Office of Inspector General, Report of Investigation: Preparation of the Voter Fraud and Voter Intimidation
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History
Implementation of the EAC has sometimes deviated in practice from the plan for the agency set
out in HAVA. The first commissioners were not appointed on the timeline specified by the act, for
example, which contributed to failures to meet other statutory deadlines.
Interpretations of the plan for the agency—and views about whether to change it—have also
differed among Members and in response to new developments. Some have seen the EAC as a
temporary fix for a short-term problem, for example, while others have viewed it as a permanent
fixture in federal elections work. Recent developments in the election administration landscape,
such as foreign efforts to interfere in the 2016 elections and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic
in the 2020 election cycle, have suggested potential new functions for the agency.
As a result, the role of the EAC and congressional perspectives on its role have varied over the
course of the agency’s history, from its initial setup in the wake of the 2000 elections to its
participation in the federal response to more recent developments.
Initial Setup
HAVA called for members to be appointed to the EAC’s commission by February 2003, but the
first four commissioners did not take office until December.93 The act also authorized up to $10
million in operational funding for the agency for each of FY2003 through FY2005, but, with no
commissioners in place for FY2003 or the start of FY2004, Congress appropriated significantly
less than the authorized ceiling for the first two of those fiscal years (see Table 2 for details).94
The delay in appointing commissioners and limited early funding for the agency contributed to
the EAC missing statutory deadlines for conducting research and issuing voluntary guidance.
Work on the agency’s voting system testing and certification program also started later than
anticipated.
Those developments had practical implications. As set out in HAVA, the deadlines for the EAC to
release voluntary guidance for implementing the act’s Title III requirements preceded the
deadlines for states to start meeting the requirements.95 In theory, that would have enabled states
to use the guidance to inform their implementation of the requirements.96 In practice, the
commissioners took office nearly a month-and-a-half after the first set of guidance was due and
less than three weeks before states were supposed to start meeting requirements.97
Report, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/1/Report%20of%20Investigation%20-
%20Preparation%20of%20the%20Vote%20Fraud%20and%20Voter%20Intimidation%20Report.pdf; EAC OIG,
Report of Investigation: Work Environment at the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/
default/files/eac_assets/1/1/
Report%20of%20Investigation%20Work%20Environment%20at%20the%20U.S.%20Election%20Assistance%20Com
mission.pdf; and EAC OIG, Redacted Report of Investigation: Misconduct – Election Assistance Commission, at
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/28/Redacted%20Report%20of%20Investigation%20-
%20ADA.pdf.
93 52 U.S.C. §20923. U.S. Election Assistance Commission, Annual Report Fiscal Year 2003, p. 1, at
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/document_library/files/FY_2003_Annual_Report.pdf.
94 52 U.S.C. §20930.
95 52 U.S.C. §21101; and 52 U.S.C. §§21081-21083.
96 Committee on House Administration, Oversight Hearing on the Election Assistance Commission, June 17, 2004, pp.
53-54.
97 Montjoy and Chapin, “The U.S. Election Assistance Commission: What Role in the Administration of Elections?” p.
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The EAC’s voting system testing and certification program is also intended to help inform state
and local choices of voting systems. However, states that were planning to use HAVA’s lever and
punch card voting system replacement grant funding to upgrade their systems after the 2000
elections had to either replace all of their lever and punch card machines by the regular federal
general election in November 2004 or return some of the funds.98 They could apply for an
extension of that deadline to the first election after January 1, 2006—which was ultimately
further extended to the first election after November 1, 2010—but VVSG 1.0 was not adopted
until December 2005 and the first system was not certified to the guidelines until February
2009.99
Efforts to Terminate
As of the beginning of the 112th Congress, the EAC had distributed most of the grant funding it
was authorized by HAVA to administer and completed much of the research the act directed it to
conduct. The National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) had recently renewed a
resolution—first adopted in 2005 and subsequently approved again in 2015—that called for
disbanding the agency.100 The authorization of operational funding for the EAC had expired, and
the agency’s OIG reported ongoing issues with its performance management, information
security, work environment, records management, and overhead expenses.101
Those developments were taken by some as evidence that the agency had outlived its
usefulness.102 Members introduced legislation to terminate the EAC in each of the 112th through
115th Congresses, and the House Appropriations Committee recommended cutting or eliminating
its funding each fiscal year between FY2012 and FY2018.103 For details of those funding
recommendations, see Table 2 and Table 3.
622.
98 52 U.S.C. §20902.
99 EAC, “EAC Adopts 2005 Voluntary Voting System Guidelines,” at https://web.archive.org/web/20170327213819/
https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/28/VVSG_1.0_Press_Release.pdf; and Brennan Center for Justice, Voting System
Failures: A Database Solution, 2010, p. 8, at https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/voting-system-
failures-database-solution. According to information available on the EAC’s website, it appears as if only one other
system was certified before November 1, 2010. EAC, Certified Voting Systems, at https://www.eac.gov/voting-
equipment/certified-voting-systems.
100 National Association of Secretaries of State, Resolution Reaffirming the NASS Position on Funding and
Authorization of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, July 12, 2015, at https://www.nass.org/sites/default/files/
resolutions/2015/nass-resolution-eac-summer15-_0.pdf.
101 See, for example, U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Financial Services and
General Government, Testimony of Curtis W. Crider, Inspector General, Before the U.S. House Appropriations
Committee, Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government, 112th Cong., 1st sess., March 2, 2011, pp. 6,
9.
102 See, for example, U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Markup of H.R. 94, to Amend the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 to Prohibit the Use of Public Funds for Political Party Conventions; H.R. 95, to Reduce Federal
Spending and the Deficit by Terminating Taxpayer Financing of Presidential Election Campaigns and Party
Conventions; H.R. 1994, Election Assistance Commission Termination Act; Committee Resolution Dismissing the
Election Contest in CA-43; and Committee Resolution Dismissing the Election Contest in TN-9, 113th Cong., 1st sess.,
June 4, 2013 (Washington: GPO, 2013), pp. 6-7, 54.
103 Election Support Consolidation and Efficiency Act (H.R. 672, 112th Congress); To reduce Federal spending and the
deficit by terminating taxpayer financing of presidential election campaigns and party conventions and by terminating
the Election Assistance Commission (H.R. 260, 113th Congress); Election Assistance Commission Termination Act
(H.R. 1994, 113th Congress); Election Assistance Commission Termination Act (H.R. 195, 114th Congress); and
Election Assistance Commission Termination Act (H.R. 634, 115th Congress).
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Table 2. Proposed and Enacted Funding for EAC Operations, FY2003 to FY2013
Figures for the House and Senate reflect chamber-passed, committee-reported, or other proposed levels,
as indicated ($ millions)
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
Request
—
10.0
10.0
14.8
12.0
12.2
12.7
13.3
13.6
10.5
8.8
Houseb
—
5.0
12.5
13.1
12.0
12.2
12.9
13.4
12.7
5.2
4.4
Senateb
—
c
7.0
9.9
12.1
12.2
12.7
13.3
13.6
11.5
8.8
Enacted
2.0
1.2a
10.8
11.4
11.3
12.3
12.9
13.4
13.1
8.8
8.8
Sources: CRS, based on data from the President’s budget requests and relevant appropriations measures.
Notes: Figures are from appropriations for the EAC’s Salaries and Expenses account, including funds designated
for the agency’s Office of Inspector General. They are rounded and do not reflect rescissions, sequestration
reductions, or funds designated for the National Institute of Standards and Technology, mock election grants, or
the Help America Vote Col ege Program. As such, the amounts in this table may not match total figures provided
in appropriations measures or other budget documents.
a. The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2004 (P.L. 108-199) provided $800,000 in funding for the Federal
Election Commission’s Office of Election Administration (OEA). The act indicated that any of that funding
OEA had left when its staff and functions were transferred to the EAC should also be transferred to the
EAC.
b. Figures for the House and Senate indicate chamber-specific action: bold for a chamber-passed bil and
regular text for a measure that did not pass the chamber. The figures in regular text are from committee-
reported measures.
c. The Senate-passed bil did not include a separate account for EAC Salaries and Expenses. It would have
provided $1.5 bil ion for EAC-administered grants under a general EAC account but did not designate a
specific portion of the funds for EAC operations.
Table 3. Proposed and Enacted Funding for EAC Operations, FY2014 to FY2023
Figures for the House and Senate reflect chamber-passed, committee-reported, or other proposed levels,
as indicated ($ millions)
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
Request
8.3
8.1
8.1
8.3
7.7
7.7
8.1
11.6
21.3
28.6
Housea
0.0
0.0
4.8
4.9
5.5
8.6b
12.5
17.6
21.3
28.6
Senatea
8.3
8.1
8.1
8.1
7.7
7.7
8.1
11.3
18.5
20.5
Enacted
8.1
8.1
8.1
8.2
8.6
8.0
11.3
15.5
18.5
25.5
Sources: CRS, based on data from the President’s budget requests and relevant appropriations measures.
Notes: Figures are from appropriations for the EAC’s Salaries and Expenses account, including funds designated
for the agency’s Office of Inspector General. They are rounded and do not reflect rescissions, sequestration
reductions, or funds designated for the National Institute of Standards and Technology, mock election grants, the
Help America Vote Col ege Program, or agency relocation expenses. As such, the amounts in this table may not
match total figures provided in appropriations measures or other budget documents.
a. Figures for the House and Senate indicate chamber-specific action: bold for a chamber-passed bil and
regular text for a measure that did not pass the chamber. The figures in regular text are from committee-
reported measures with the fol owing exceptions: the Senate figure for FY2015 is from the subcommittee
bil , and the Senate figures for FY2018, FY2021, FY2022, and FY2023 are from the committee chairman’s
draft.
b. This figure reflects the level in House-passed bil H.R. 6147. The House subsequently passed other bil s that
would have provided other levels of funding for the EAC.
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The Senate also stopped confirming—and some congressional leaders stopped recommending—
nominees to the agency’s commission.104 The commission lost the numbers required for a quorum
in December 2010 and both of its remaining members in December 2011 (see Figure 2 for
details).105 The Senate, some of whose Members cited opposition to the existence of the agency
rather than to individual nominees, did not confirm any new commissioners until December
2014.106
Without a quorum, the commission could not take official action. One notable consequence was
that it could not update the VVSG.107 The creation of the EAC was partly a response to the FEC’s
failure to keep its voting system guidelines up to date.108 However, the lack of a quorum between
December 2010 and the swearing in of the newly confirmed commissioners in January 2015 left a
nearly decade-long gap between the EAC’s adoption of VVSG 1.0 in 2005 and its first update in
2015.109
104 Amanda Becker, “The Phantom Commission,” Roll Call, October 31, 2012, at https://rollcall.com/2012/10/31/the-
phantom-commission/.
105 EAC, Statement of Gracia M. Hillman on the Occasion of her Resignation as Commissioner, U.S. Election
Assistance Commission, December 6, 2010, at https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/document_library/files/
GH%20Statement_12_06_10.pdf; and EAC, 2012 Activities Report, p. 7, at https://web.archive.org/web/
20170328053540/https://www.eac.gov/assets/1/6/FY-2012-EAC-Activities-Report-Website-Scanned.pdf.
106 See, for example, U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, Hearings and Markups Before
the Committee on Rules and Administration, hearings and markups, 112th Cong., 1st sess., June 29, 2011, S.Hrg. 112-
770 (Washington: GPO, 2014), p. 18.
107 Another consequence was that the EAC could not appoint statutory officers. That left it without a permanent
executive director or general counsel after the then-officeholders resigned in November 2011 and May 2012,
respectively. U.S. Election Assistance Commission, 2012 Activities Report, p. 7.
108 House Committee on Science, Voting Technology Standards Act of 2001, pp. 5-6. The Voting Technology Standards
Act of 2001 (H.R. 2275) proposed establishing a commission to develop voluntary voting system standards and consult
on accreditation of voting system test labs. The bill was largely incorporated into HAVA. Committee on House
Administration, Oversight Hearing on the Election Assistance Commission, June 17, 2004, p. 54.
109 A second quorum-less period led to another delay in updating the VVSG. The commission was without a quorum
from the departure of one of its members in March 2018 until two new commissioners took office in February 2019. A
pending update to the VVSG, which had previously been slated for release in 2018, was pushed back. EAC,
Commissioners Hovland, Palmer Sworn in to Restore Quorum at EAC, February 6, 2019, at https://www.eac.gov/news/
2019/02/06/commissioners-hovland-palmer-sworn-in-to-restore-quorum-at-eac/; EAC, Voluntary Voting System
Guidelines.
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Figure 2. Tenures of EAC Commissioners
Sources: CRS, based on data from the EAC and Congress.gov.
Response to Recent Developments
Recent election cycles have seen a number of high-profile developments, including efforts by
foreign actors to interfere in the 2016 elections, the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic in the
2020 election cycle, and an increase in reports of threats to election workers during and after
2020.110
The EAC has played a role in the federal response to each of those developments. Perhaps most
prominently, it has administered elections grants. Congress responded to foreign efforts to
interfere in the 2016 elections and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in part with funding
under HAVA’s general improvements grant program, and it charged the EAC with administering
the funds.111
The agency has also provided nonfinancial resources. As noted in the “Structure” section of this
report, it helped set up and has continued to participate in the EIS.112 Both in that role and
independently, it has offered assistance with securing election systems. It has produced resources
to help election officials address the cybersecurity threats highlighted by foreign efforts to
interfere in elections, for example, as well as the physical threats posed by the COVID-19
pandemic and both physical and cybersecurity threats to election workers.113
110 See, for example, DHS, “Joint Statement from the Department of Homeland Security and Office of the Director of
National Intelligence on Election Security,” press release, October 7, 2016, at https://www.dhs.gov/news/2016/10/07/
joint-statement-department-homeland-security-and-office-director-national. For more on threats to election workers,
see CRS Insight IN11831, Election Worker Safety and Privacy, by Sarah J. Eckman and Karen L. Shanton; and CRS
Legal Sidebar LSB10781, Overview of Federal Criminal Laws Prohibiting Threats and Harassment of Election
Workers, by Jimmy Balser.
111 For more on the HAVA funding Congress has provided in response to recent developments, see CRS Report
R46646, Election Administration: Federal Grant Funding for States and Localities, by Karen L. Shanton; and CRS
Report WPD00035, Federal Role in Elections Funding, by Karen L. Shanton.
112 EAC, 2018 Annual Report, pp. 31-33, at https://web.archive.org/web/20190322203853/https://www.eac.gov/assets/
1/6/EACannualreport_2018.pdf.
113 See, for example, EAC, Election Security, at https://www.eac.gov/voters/election-security; EAC, Coronavirus
(COVID-19) Resources, at https://www.eac.gov/election-officials/coronavirus-covid-19-resources; and EAC, Election
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Supporters of an ongoing role for the EAC have cited its participation in the federal response to
recent developments as new grounds to extend or expand it.114 More generally, the focus of
debate about the EAC seems to have shifted in the 116th and 117th Congresses from whether there
is a role for the agency to what that role should be. Proposed and enacted operational funding for
the EAC has increased in recent years over the levels provided in earlier Congresses, for example,
and proposals to terminate the agency were not reintroduced in the 116th or 117th Congresses.
Legislative Activity
One question Congress considered when developing the EAC was whether it should exist as a
separate agency at all. That question was also a subject of particular congressional interest in the
112th through 115th Congresses, which saw efforts by some Members to disband the agency.
As noted in the “Response to Recent Developments” section of this report, debate about whether
there is a role for the EAC seems to have receded in prominence in the 116th and 117th
Congresses. There have continued to be questions about exactly what the agency’s role should be,
however, including what types of tasks it should perform and how it should operate.
Members have introduced legislation on each of the above questions since HAVA’s enactment in
2002, offering proposals related to (1) whether to maintain an election administration agency and,
if so, (2) what the agency should do and (3) how it should do it.
Whether to Maintain an Election Administration Agency
HAVA only authorized operational funding for the new election administration agency it created
for three fiscal years. Some Members took that as an indication that the EAC was intended to be
temporary. As described in the “Efforts to Terminate” section of this report, they introduced
appropriations measures that would have reduced or eliminated the agency’s funding and
authorizing legislation that would have terminated it and redistributed any of its remaining duties
to other agencies.
Other Members have highlighted benefits of ongoing EAC responsibilities like updating the
VVSG and conducting the EAVS and argued that its duties could not be performed as
effectively—or much more cost-effectively—by other agencies.115 They have provided for
ongoing appropriations for the agency and proposed removing potential ambiguity about its status
by reauthorizing its operational funding.
Table 4 offers some examples of legislative proposals to terminate or defund the EAC, as well as
examples of proposals to extend it.
Official Security, at https://www.eac.gov/election-officials/election-official-security.
114 See, for example, Committee on House Administration, Markup of H.R. 634, Election Assistance Commission
Termination Act; H.R. 133, to Reduce Federal Spending and the Deficit by Terminating Taxpayer Financing of
Presidential Election Campaigns; and Committee Resolution 115-4, the Committee’s Views and Estimates on the
Fiscal Year 2018, February 7, 2017, pp. 2-3.
115 See, for example, U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Election Support Consolidation and
Efficiency Act, report to accompany H.R. 672, 112th Cong., 1st sess., June 2, 2011, H.Rept. 112-100 (Washington: GPO,
2011), pp. 54-56; and U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration, Second Semiannual Report on the Activities
of the Committee on House Administration of the House of Representatives During the One Hundred Twelfth Congress
Together with Minority Views, report, 112th Cong., 1st sess., December 30, 2011, H.Rept. 112-360 (Washington: GPO,
2011), p. 14.
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Table 4. Selected Legislation Related to Whether to Maintain an Election
Administration Agency
Short Title
Number
Congress
Summary of Selected Provisions
Election Assistance Commission
H.R. 634
115th
Would have terminated the U.S. Election
Termination Act
Assistance Commission (EAC)
Election Support Consolidation
H.R. 672
112th
Would have terminated the EAC
and Efficiency Act
Enhanced Election Security and
S. 4574
117th
Would have reauthorized operational funding for
Protection Act
the EAC
Financial Services and General
H.R. 5016
113th
Would have defunded the EAC
Government Appropriations
Act, 2015
Freedom to Vote Act
S. 2747
117th
Would have reauthorized operational funding for
the EAC
Source: CRS, based on data from Congress.gov.
Notes: The provisions summarized in this table are intended as examples of the types of proposals that have
been offered. They do not include all proposals in all bil s in this category or even, in some cases, all such
proposals in the bil in which they appear.
What the Agency Should Do
The EAC is the only federal agency dedicated to the general administration of elections. As a
result, it has been a common choice of agency for proposals to take new federal action on
elections issues.
That is especially true of proposals to extend the EAC’s existing duties into new issue areas.
HAVA charged the EAC with administering grant programs; issuing voluntary guidance for
implementing federal requirements; conducting research and sharing best practices; and providing
for voluntary voting system guidelines, testing, and certification. Elections legislation involving
those types of tasks, such as bills that would authorize development of voluntary guidelines for e-
poll books or grant programs for conducting risk-limiting audits, often assigns them to the EAC.
There have also, though, been proposals to assign the agency new types of tasks, including tasks
that would expand it beyond its traditional assistance focus. Members have introduced legislation
that would direct the agency to set mandatory standards for certain aspects of election
administration, for example, or lift the limit on EAC rulemaking in general.116
Table 5 offers some examples from the 117th Congress of legislative proposals to assign the EAC
new responsibilities.
116 See, for example, the Election Integrity Act of 2016 (H.R. 6072).
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Table 5. Selected Legislation Related to What the Agency Should Do
(117th Congress)
Short Title
Number
Summary of Selected Provisions
Frank Harrison, Elizabeth
H.R. 5008
Would have directed the U.S. Election Assistance
Peratrovich, and Miguel Trujil o
Commission (EAC) to administer a grant program for
Native American Voting Rights
establishing and operating state Native American voting
Act of 2021
task forces
Protect Our Elections Act
H.R. 6574
Would have directed the EAC to maintain a database
of election service providers that meet specified
criteria
Restoring Faith in Elections Act
H.R. 102
Would have instituted a voter identification
requirement, and directed the EAC to issue voluntary
guidance for implementing it
Voter Choice Act
H.R. 5500/S. 2939
Would have directed the EAC to establish a program
to provide technical assistance and award grants for
transitioning to ranked choice voting
Voting Access Act
H.R. 1343
Would have directed the EAC to set mandatory
standards for pol ing place locations and operations
Source: CRS, based on data from Congress.gov.
Notes: The provisions summarized in this table are intended as examples of the types of proposals that have
been offered. They do not include all proposals in all bil s in this category or even, in some cases, all such
proposals in the bil in which they appear.
How the Agency Should Function
How agencies are set up can help determine how effective they are at achieving their intended
purposes. As a result, some legislative activity on the EAC has focused less on what the agency
does and more on how it does it.
Some proposals to change how the EAC works have focused on the structure of the agency. Bills
have been introduced to create new EAC advisory bodies or add new members to existing
advisory bodies, for example, as well as to prohibit use of operational funding for agency-created
advisory bodies other than the LLC.
Other bills would make procedural changes. Members have proposed exempting the EAC from
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA; P.L. 104-13; 44 U.S.C. §§3501-3521) to make it
easier for the agency to solicit information from election officials, for example, or providing for
concurrent submission of its budget requests to Congress to give Members more insight into its
resource needs.117
Table 6 offers some examples from the 117th Congress of legislative proposals to change the
EAC’s structure or procedures.
117 See, for example, the EAC Improvements Act of 2013 (H.R. 2017) and the Secure America’s Vote Act of 2005
(H.R. 3094).
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Table 6. Selected Legislation Related to How the Agency Should Function
(117th Congress)
Short Title
Number
Summary of Selected Provisions
Accessible Voting Act of 2021
H.R. 2941/S. 1470
Would have established an Office of Accessibility within
the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC)
American Confidence in Elections
H.R. 8528
Would have instituted caps on the number of staff at
(ACE) Act
the EAC and its Office of Inspector General, prohibited
the agency from using operational funding for agency-
created advisory bodies other than the Local
Leadership Council, and adjusted commissioner
compensation
For the People Act of 2021
H.R. 1
Would have directed the EAC to have a Senior Cyber
Policy Advisor
For the People Act of 2021
H.R. 1/S. 1 /S.
Would have added the Secretary of the U.S.
2093
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) or the
Secretary’s designee to the EAC’s Board of Advisors
and a DHS representative to its Technical Guidelines
Development Committee
Voter Empowerment Act of 2021
H.R. 2358/S. 954
Would have repealed the EAC’s exemption from
certain government contracting requirements
Source: CRS, based on data from Congress.gov.
Notes: The provisions summarized in this table are intended as examples of the types of proposals that have
been offered. They do not include all proposals in all bil s in this category or even, in some cases, all such
proposals in the bil in which they appear.
Potential Considerations for Congress
Congress has the authority to conduct oversight of the EAC and to legislate on both the agency
and election administration more broadly.118 The history of the EAC and related legislative
activity suggest some considerations that may be of interest to Members who are weighing
whether or how to take action on those authorities.
Adding agency expertise. As noted in the “Overview” section of this report, the
EAC was designed in part to provide for a range of expert input into agency
activities. However, new developments might call for experience or expertise not
contemplated by HAVA. Previously introduced legislation suggests various possible
ways to provide for new expertise at the agency if Congress chooses to do so,
including adding members to the agency’s advisory bodies, creating new advisory
bodies or agency offices, and directing the agency to hire certain staff or consult with
certain stakeholders.119
118 See, for example, U.S. Const. art. 1. §4. cl. 1.
119 Each of these options might have its own advantages and disadvantages. Adding new advisory body members
provides for additional expert input into agency activities, for example, but might give certain stakeholders more direct
access to EAC actions and decisionmaking than some Members might prefer. For one possible concern about such
access, see Committee on House Administration, Subcommittee on Elections, Oversight Hearing on the Election
Assistance Commission, August 2, 2007, p. 87; and U.S. Congress, Committee on House Administration,
Subcommittee on Elections, Oversight Hearing on the Election Assistance Commission, hearing, 110th Cong., 1st sess.,
March 12, 2008 (Washington: GPO, 2008), pp. 34-37.
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Assigning duties. One way to provide for elections-related expertise at the federal
level is to add new expertise at the EAC. Another is to draw on other federal
agencies. Congress assigned many of the elections responsibilities it established in
HAVA to the EAC, but it reserved certain tasks to other agencies or to the EAC in
conjunction with other agencies. It charged the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) with administering HAVA’s disability access grant programs,
for example, and NIST with providing the EAC various types of technical assistance.
Members contemplating new elections duties that would involve experience or
expertise available at agencies other than the EAC might consider whether to take a
similar approach or to assert a sole or primary role for the EAC.
Assessing resource needs. The EAC has been described variously as both
overfunded and underfunded.120 Developments like the election security threats in
recent election cycles have also prompted calls for additional resources for agency
operations and for distribution to states and localities through the EAC.121 Congress
might choose to consider how the types and levels of funding available for the EAC,
agencies like NIST that support the EAC, and EAC grantees align with current
resource needs.122 Members who are considering assigning new tasks to the EAC
might also consider whether or not to authorize or appropriate additional funding for
the new tasks and, if so, whether to provide it as a dedicated funding stream or part of
an overall increase in the agency’s operational funding. Various tools might be
available to help assess resource needs, including studies of appropriate funding
levels, concurrent budget submission, and reporting on available resources.123
Scheduling activity. As noted in the “Initial Setup” section of this report, EAC
guidance is intended to inform state and local action. As also noted in that section,
however, it has not always served that purpose in practice. Lack of a quorum at the
commission and the time required to complete tasks like developing voting system
guidelines and manufacturing, testing, and certifying systems to the guidelines have
delayed the availability—and reduced the practical utility—of some of the EAC’s
guidance. Members who are contemplating assigning the EAC new guidance
responsibilities might consider whether to try to account for the potential for such
delays. One option might be to build in extra time between EAC deadlines and state
or local deadlines. Another might be to condition state or local deadlines on EAC
action, by setting the deadline for state or local action for a certain number of months
or years after the EAC has issued guidance rather than a specific date.
Considering the quorum requirement. One possible approach to addressing delays
in EAC activity caused by lack of a quorum of commissioners is to adjust deadlines.
Another might be to try to reduce the potential for quorum-related delays. Some
general strategies for doing so might include (1) eliminating the need for a quorum
120 See, for example, the “Initial Setup” and “Efforts to Terminate” sections of this report.
121 See, for example, Letter from Rep. Steny Hoyer, Rep. Jamie Raskin, Rep. Bob Brady et al. to Rep. Rodney
Frelinghuysen, Rep. Nita Lowey, Rep. Tom Graves, and Rep. Mike Quigley, March 19, 2018, at
https://web.archive.org/web/20181222200937/https://raskin.house.gov/sites/raskin.house.gov/files/
FY%2019%20EAC%20Appropriations%20Letter_0.pdf.
122 HAVA did not explicitly authorize funding for the activities it directed NIST to carry out. However, appropriations
measures have consistently directed the EAC to transfer funding or make funding available to NIST for those activities.
123 See, for example, the Bipartisan Electronic Voting Reform Act of 2008 (S. 3722, §7), the Voting Opportunity and
Technology Enhancement Rights Act of 2011 (H.R. 108, §112), and the For the People Act of 2021 (H.R. 1/S. 1/S.
2093, §3602).
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for certain activities, by exempting them from the quorum requirement, and (2) trying
to reduce the likelihood of loss of a quorum.124 Options for the latter approach might
include structural changes to the commission, such as adding or removing a seat, or
procedural changes to the way commissioners are seated, such as revising the roles of
the President or congressional leadership in the selection process.
Author Information
Karen L. Shanton
Analyst in American National Government
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in
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copy or otherwise use copyrighted material.
124 See, for example, Edward Perez, “Perspectives from the U.S. Election Assistance Commission Public Hearing in
Memphis,” OSET Institute, April 12, 2019. See also footnote 40 in the “Voting System Guidelines, Testing, and
Certification” section of this report.
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