Here's the relevant passage:
To me, unless I'm missing an important word somewhere, it says they were reviewing to see if they were impacted, and Microsoft said their inexistent Office 365 email was attacked by *someone.* But not APT 29, per say.
Previously, I mentioned that you needed to vote, because I, as a cybersecurity reporter who knows how to do such things, had already voted in your district. You need to cancel me out.
But the situation is more dire. 1/x
Now I have, again, voted in your district. You need to find a friend to vote to have the two votes necessary to cancel out my vote.
And, since it's a secret ballot, and you don't know how your friends vote, maybe it'd be wise to find two or three extra friends to also go vote.
Important note one: Campaigns aren't election infrastructure. So, when DHS said they weren't seeing attacks against election infrastructure (i.e. voting machines, poll books, etc) this doesn't contradict that.
Important note two: We don't know what the intent was behind attempted hacking. So, while the obvious thoughts will turn to hack and leak sabotage, like in 2016...
Most of the time, these groups are just trying to get boring intelligence from people in the know.