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Common Core State Standard
SL.CCS.1/2/3/4 Grades 6-12: An essay of a current news event is provided for discussion to encourage participation, but also inspire the use of evidence to support logical claims using the main ideas of the article. Students must analyze background information provided about a current event within the news, draw out the main ideas and key details, and review different opinions on the issue. Then, students should present their own claims using facts and analysis for support. FOR THE WEEK OF OCT. 24, 2016 Election security: Mischief can't sway presidential vote outcome, officials insist![]() ![]() Share a key fact from a politics story and tell why it matters.
![]() Now pick a voter's quote. Why do you like it?
![]() Read a computer-related article. Does the topic affect you or our community?
Campaign comments and federal finger-pointing at Russia over email hacking raise concerns about foreign meddling in next month's presidential voting process. Worries arise after the July release of nearly 20,000 hacked Democratic National Committee emails and reports of a new cyberattack against the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. U.S. intelligence agencies believe the Russian government of Vladimir Putin is behind the summer theft, supposedly because Moscow leaders think a Donald Trump would be more favorable to their interests than Hillary Clinton. But U.S. officials play down any threat to the integrity of Nov. 8 balloting, at least at the national level. The voting process remains "very, very hard to hack into because it is so clunky and dispersed," FBI Director James Comey told a U.S. House hearing last month. "It is Mary and Fred putting a machine under the basketball hoop at the gym. These things are not connected to the Internet." Still, he says, federal authorities urge state officials to secure voter registration databases and other systems being scanned by hackers for weak spots. Nearly 80 percent of U.S. voters will use paper ballots or machines with paper backups, both of which are considered much more secure than online-only systems. For his part, Trump claims a possible threat could come from his opponent's side. At rallies and online, the Republican nominee invites backers to volunteer as polling place observers "to help me stop 'crooked Hillary' from rigging this election." In Pennsylvania this month, he told a rally: "We have to make sure that this election is not stolen from us." And at the final debate last week, he declined to say he'd accept the Nov. 8 outcome as valid. "Millions of people are registered to vote that shouldn’t be registered to vote," he replied to a question from moderator Chris Wallace. That's risky rhetoric, says a California political scientist who warns against "sowing the seeds of distrust." The professor, Melinda Jackson of San Jose State University, fears that creating doubt about the election's integrity "puts us in a whole different category of countries that don't have free and fair elections." If Trump or a group supporting him questions the legitimacy of the outcome, Jackson adds, "we might see violence, we might see protests, we might see rioting -- things that we see in other countries. It's not impossible."
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2025
Front Page Talking Points Archive►Courts try to halt rushed removals of alleged gang members, testing presidential powers ►U.S. Education Department shrinks as the president tries to 'move education back to the states' ►Batter up: Odd-looking 'torpedo bat' apparently can help players smash home runs ►Top U.S. officials mistakenly leaked Yemen attack phone chat messages before jets and missiles flew ►Trump stirs drama with talk of wanting Greenland, Canada and the Panama Canal ►Measles outbreaks bring reminders of need for childhood vaccines ►White House media policy changes spark lawsuit by AP and concerns about presidential access ►'America has turned:' Trump veers away from backing Ukraine in war against Russian invaders |
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