In the lead up to, during, and following the 2022 U.S. midterm elections, Mandiant identified information operations activity from various foreign state-aligned campaigns, including those it assessed to be operating in the interests of #Russia, #China and #Iran

A few interesting examples in here
https://www.mandiant.com/resources/blog/information-operations-2022-midterm-elections

Information Operations Targeting 2022 U.S. Midterm Elections Include Trolling, Narratives Surrounding Specific Races, Politicians | Mandiant

Mandiant

One that stood out to me:

Some activity appeared intended to “troll” defenders, potentially to generate the perception of foreign influence while investing limited resources in the effort

[...]

It is likely that a primary objective of the identified pro-Russia actors [in one identified campaign] was to build the *perception* of influencing the elections—potentially in hopes of supporting future narratives that would undermine the credibility of the election results [emphasis added]

This is a soviet-style demoralization / media exploitation operation.

These work by muddying the waters of public discussion so as to make it harder for the public to know or reach consensus views on anything.

Here, it allows them to simulteniously be interfering and not-interfering, depending on your personal priors, and as a way to discredit researchers engaged in it.

Not useful directly in its own right, but these create the conditions for long-term public fissures for later exploitation.

It's also one of the things that's become obvious in recent years: the job of elections is not /merely/ to collect votes and correctly count them, but to do so credibly so that the public accepts the result.

In other words, you can "hack" the election in one of two ways:
1. The hard way: actually mess with collection/tally/reporting
2. The demoralization way: don't mess with collection/tally/reporting, but undermine the credibility of it anyway so that people don't believe the outcome.

@Pwnallthethings Yes—this. My prediction, in 2016 when there were reports of state election-related websites being (at least) probed, was that the GRU's plan was to delete the registrations of ~10% of voters in red counties, to support Trump's claim that the election was stolen when he lost (which is what everyone expected back then).