- President Trump renewed claims of 2020 election fraud despite contrary intelligence and studies
- He pushed the SAVE America Act imposing strict voter ID laws, passed by the House but stalled in Senate
- Trump accused China of election interference, contradicting a 2021 intelligence report dismissing such acts
President Donald Trump renewed his campaign to cast doubt on US elections on Thursday, declassifying intelligence he said exposed fraud and foreign interference despite intelligence findings and independent studies that undercut several of his claims.
Trump has made the claim that the 2020 elections were "rigged" more than 100 times over the first half of 2026, and has used those claims to push for Congress to pass a restrictive voter ID law called the SAVE America Act, which would impose strict ID requirements on voters, and seek greater federal intervention in elections.
The SAVE America Act has passed the Republican-controlled US House of Representatives several times with a simple majority, but it does not have the 60 votes to overcome a filibuster in the Republican-led Senate.
Trump said the White House was releasing a trove of classified documents that he said exposed vulnerabilities in US election systems, including claims that:
China Sought To Boost Democrats In Recent Elections
Trump accused the Chinese government of influencing elections to try to harm his fellow Republicans in the 2018 midterms and damage his reelection prospects in 2020. He also accused Beijing of compromising data on US voters.
A prior US intelligence report came to a different conclusion. A 2021 assessment concluded China considered conducting influence operations designed to change the 2020 election outcome but decided against doing so. It was conducted under John Ratcliffe, then Trump's director of national intelligence and now his CIA director.
The intelligence assessment judged that China sought to collect information on US voters, public opinion and political parties dating back at least to 2008. The voter data China obtained was not confidential and was not used to alter votes.
VENEZUELA MANIPULATED ITS ELECTRONIC VOTING MACHINES
Trump relied on CIA documents about purported election-rigging by former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to argue that US voting machines were vulnerable to hacking. He said Maduro's government was able to digitally alter vote totals.
A CIA document summarizing intelligence reporting between 2004 and 2020 found the Venezuelan government had the capability to digitally manipulate votes.
There is no evidence that such vote-rigging has occurred in US elections and Trump did not allege these techniques were used in any election in the US. A theory spread by Trump supporters that the Maduro government hacked US voting machines in 2020 has been widely debunked.
Large Numbers Of Non-Citizens Are Registered To Vote
Trump said a review by the Department of Homeland Security identified about 278,000 non-US-citizens who are registered to vote in federal elections in violation of US law. Trump and his allies have repeatedly pushed such claims to seek tighter voting restrictions.
Several Republican-led states have voluntarily turned over private voter data to the Trump administration in an attempt to identify and remove purported non-citizens on their voter lists. The Trump administration has lost 15 lawsuits seeking to compel other states, largely Democratic-led, to submit voter data, according to Democracy Docket, an online election security publication.
Independent studies have found that non-citizen voting is rare. The Bipartisan Policy Center found that when states sought to verify the eligibility of their voters, just 0.04% of cases were identified as non-citizens. Elections experts have raised concerns that eligible voters could be disenfranchised in large-scale purges of state voter rolls.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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