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Secret 2020 Election Files Go Public Under Donald Trump’s Orders, China Fires Back With Blunt Response, Check

President Trump declassified documents alleging China accessed 220 million US voter files during the 2020 election cycle. China's embassy called the claims baseless, insisting it does not interfere in other nations' elections.

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Donald Trump: President Donald Trump used a primetime address from the White House to announce the declassification of documents tied to the 2020 election and alleged Chinese interference. He claimed the files show China carried out what he called the largest compromise of election data in history, resulting in the illicit acquisition of 220 million US voter files containing names, addresses, phone numbers and party affiliations.

Donald Trump’s Core Claims Towards China

  • China allegedly obtained voter data from 18 states through purchase, theft or hacking
  • A dedicated Chinese intelligence unit was reportedly assigned to exploit the data
  • Trump alleged intelligence agencies suppressed reports on China’s activity from his 2020 daily briefings
  • A separate set of files covers a voter-registration fraud probe in Muskegon, Michigan

Trump has directed the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the FBI, the CIA and the Department of Justice to investigate how the information was handled internally.

China’s Response

Beijing rejected the accusations outright. The spokesperson at the Chinese embassy in Washington told CNN:

“China has all along adhered to the principle of non-interference in others’ internal affairs… China has never and will never interfere in the presidential elections of the US.”

The statement echoed China’s long-standing position that the outcome of any US election is decided by American voters alone.

What US Intelligence Previously Concluded

The newly released files sit alongside earlier intelligence assessments that complicate Trump’s framing. A January 2021 US intelligence community report concluded that China did not deploy interference efforts and did not attempt to change the outcome of the presidential election, even though it noted Beijing would have preferred Trump’s defeat. Analysts have also pointed out that voter registration data is often publicly available or commercially purchasable in many states, meaning possession of such records does not by itself prove interference in vote counts.

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