Trump alleges China meddled in 2020 election and questions voting security ahead of midterms
45 minutes ago


EPA
US President Donald Trump has delivered a primetime address in which he accused China of interfering in the 2020 election and alleged “shocking vulnerabilities” in American voting systems
Trump, who spoke from the White House on Thursday, has repeatedly made unsubstantiated claims about voter fraud and foreign meddling in the 2020 election, which he lost to Joe Biden
In the half-hour speech, delivered three months before the midterm elections, he said he had declassified hundreds of intelligence files which supported his claims that Beijing had tried to sway the election in Biden’s favour
The US intelligence community has previously concluded China did not interfere in the 2020 election
In response to his speech, China’s foreign ministry strongly denied the allegations of Chinese meddling in the 2020 presidential election, saying they were “entirely fabricated”
Trump’s claims are “malicious smears” which have “long been proven to be groundless”, foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said
Trump spoke in front of several members of his top team as he gave his address, but journalists were unable to put questions to the president
In his remarks, he accused China of the “illicit acquisition” of 220 million voter files including personal information
Trump said voter data in 18 states was “bought, stolen or hacked by China” and accused “those responsible for sounding the alarm” of not disclosing the discovery to government officials or Congress
Trump did not in his speech present any evidence that China had used the information it allegedly gathered to alter voting systems or to influence election outcomes
Hundreds of pages of intelligence documents were released by the White House during Trump’s address, many of them heavily redacted. The BBC is in the process of reviewing them
Democrats, meanwhile, accused Trump of attempting to sow doubts about the security of the upcoming November midterms which will decide control of Congress for the remainder of his presidency
“Let’s be clear – in America, voters choose their leaders, not the other way around,” top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer posted on social media after the speech
“Democrats will fight like hell to make sure every American voter can cast their ballot freely, without obstruction or interference from Donald Trump,” he added
The president’s comments contradict previous US intelligence assessments. A 2021 report by the US National Intelligence Council said it had “high confidence” that China did not interfere in the 2020 presidential election
“We assess that China did not deploy interference efforts and considered but did not deploy influence efforts intended to change the outcome of the US presidential election,” the report stated
It said this was probably because China “did not view either election outcome as being advantageous enough for China to risk blowback if caught”
Trump delivered the White House address after the release of a new poll from Washington Post-Ipsos, which indicated his approval rating had dropped to 37% with many voters pessimistic about the cost of living and the ongoing war with Iran
Elsewhere in the speech, the president alleged that US voting machines are “extremely exposed” to interference by foreign adversaries, including Russia, China and Iran
Shortcomings of US election infrastructure have been well-documented. Some were addressed after the 2016 election which Trump won, after the US intelligence community found that Russia had engaged in a concerted election meddling campaign that included hacking, social media influencing and funding of on-the-ground electioneering activities
During the address, Trump also alleged that a state investigation by Michigan law enforcement discovered a voter registration fraud scheme by a Democratic-affiliated group, but was constrained by the FBI from taking action before the statute of limitations expired
“It was pay, play and cheat,” he said, although he provided no evidence of votes or tabulations being changed or voting machines hacked
Separately, Trump said that the Department of Homeland Security had identified 278,000 non-citizens were registered to vote. He did not say whether any of those people had voted or had an impact on any election outcome
At the end of his speech, Trump again called for the passing the of the SAVE America Act, which bans most mail voting, requires proof of citizenship for voter registration and photo ID to cast a ballot
That legislation has been stalled in the Senate for months
What to know about the SAVE America Act
Trump encouraged Americans to urge their representatives in Congress to support its passage, but unless Republicans are also willing to abandon longstanding Senate procedures such efforts are almost certainly doomed
The speech is likely to do little to quell the concerns of Democrats that Trump is attempting to call into question the security of the upcoming midterms and the 2028 presidential election
“The president is scared of your power, and he wants you to believe your vote does not matter,” former Vice-President Kamala Harris wrote on X moments before Trump’s remarks
“He wants you to lose confidence in our electoral system so you stay home this November. He knows how discontent the American people are, and he wants to make sure that you do not vote,” she added
In his address Trump also attacked media outlets, including ABC, NBC and CNN, who did not run his speech live on TV, saying they should have their broadcast licences revoked
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