In a recent televised address, President Donald Trump reiterated his accusations regarding Chinese interference in the 2020 US presidential election. He announced plans to declassify intelligence documents and instructed federal agencies to probe what he termed as concealed vulnerabilities in election security. Trump emphasized a lack of public confidence in the US electoral system and called upon the Department of Justice, FBI, CIA, and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to scrutinize the handling of intelligence related to the election.
Along with these directives, Trump urged Congress to implement stricter voter identification laws. However, Democratic leaders swiftly refuted these allegations, highlighting that numerous investigations, assessments by intelligence agencies, legal rulings, audits, and recounts have consistently found no evidence that foreign interference swayed the 2020 election results. Critics claim that Trump’s assertions aim to erode trust in the electoral process as the congressional midterm elections approach.
China has firmly denied the allegations, maintaining its established stance on non-interference in the domestic affairs of other nations. This denial is supported by a US intelligence assessment released in 2021, which concluded that no foreign entity, including China, manipulated the technical aspects of the 2020 US voting process.
