Trump Says China Exploited America’s Election Weaknesses
New disclosures renew calls for stronger safeguards at the ballot box
President Donald Trump has once again placed election security at the center of the national debate, arguing that newly declassified intelligence documents reveal a level of foreign intrusion into America’s election infrastructure that should alarm every citizen. Speaking from the White House in a nationally televised address, Trump declared that the United States can no longer afford to dismiss vulnerabilities that, in his view, threaten the foundation of representative government.
“Our purpose in disclosing this information is not to weaken confidence in elections,” Trump said. “It is to earn that confidence by confronting vulnerabilities and correcting them very, very quickly.”
At the heart of Trump’s address was the claim that the People’s Republic of China obtained access to approximately 220 million American voter files beginning during the 2020 election cycle. He described the operation as “the largest compromise of election data in history” and argued that it represented a national security threat that had been minimized for years.
While critics disputed both Trump’s conclusions and the significance of the information, the president insisted that Americans deserve complete transparency whenever foreign governments attempt to gain intelligence on the nation’s election systems.
A Massive Collection of Voter Information
According to Trump, intelligence gathered by a White House task force and the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board showed that Chinese actors acquired voter registration files from eighteen states. Those files reportedly contained names, contact information, party affiliation, and other voter registration details.
Trump argued that even if no ballots were altered, obtaining such a vast database of American voters could provide a foreign adversary with valuable information for future influence operations.
“The People’s Republic of China carried out what is believed to be the largest compromise of election data in history,” Trump said. He added that approximately 220 million voter files had been “bought, stolen, or hacked by China.”
The president further claimed that Beijing sought to undermine both his first administration and his 2020 campaign through sophisticated intelligence collection efforts designed to better understand American political behavior.
Election Security Is More Than Counting Votes
Trump emphasized that election security extends well beyond the final vote tally. In his view, protecting voter databases, preventing unauthorized access to registration systems, securing electronic infrastructure, and ensuring that only eligible citizens cast ballots are all essential parts of protecting democracy.
“The US electoral system is exposed to manipulation and corruption,” Trump warned, arguing that vulnerabilities must be addressed before they are exploited by hostile foreign powers.
Rather than portraying the issue as a partisan dispute, Trump framed it as a matter of national defense. He argued that any successful penetration of election-related systems should be treated with the same seriousness as cyber attacks against military or financial infrastructure.
He also renewed his call for Congress to pass the SAVE Act, legislation that would require documentary proof of citizenship when registering to vote and strengthen voter identification requirements. Supporters argue that these measures would make it significantly more difficult for ineligible individuals to participate in federal elections while improving public confidence in election outcomes.
Claims of a Cover-Up
Perhaps Trump’s most explosive allegation involved what he described as an effort inside the intelligence community to suppress information about China’s activities.
According to the president, agencies responsible for monitoring foreign threats failed to fully inform both the White House and Congress about the extent of the alleged Chinese penetration.
Trump claimed that intelligence officials “worked to actively suppress and downplay information about the extent of China’s sinister election meddling,” adding that crucial information had been “hidden” from both the president and the American people.
To address those concerns, Trump 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.
“I’m asking the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Department of Justice, the FBI, and the CIA, to investigate how and why such crucial information was hidden, to fire those involved in the cover-up, and to file criminal charges if appropriate.”
Beyond Foreign Hacking
Trump also broadened his discussion beyond foreign cyber operations by raising concerns about voter registration itself.
He said Department of Homeland Security investigations found approximately 278,000 non-citizens registered to vote in federal elections, arguing that such findings demonstrate weaknesses that deserve immediate attention.
Taken together, Trump argued, foreign cyber collection, weaknesses in voter registration systems, and insufficient safeguards create opportunities that could eventually undermine public confidence.
“Put together, these disclosures reveal an election system so broken and so vulnerable that no one can possibly defend it,” Trump said. “It is not defensible.”
Whether every allegation ultimately proves accurate or not, the larger point made by supporters is that election systems should be designed to withstand every conceivable attempt at interference. They argue that confidence in elections depends not only on honest vote counting but also on convincing the public that every reasonable safeguard has been implemented.
The Hugo Carvajal Connection
Trump’s address also revived attention on Hugo “El Pollo” Carvajal, the former head of Venezuela’s military intelligence service.
Carvajal once occupied one of the highest intelligence positions under Hugo Chávez before later breaking with Nicolás Maduro. After fleeing Venezuela, he was arrested in Spain, extradited to the United States in 2023, and later pleaded guilty to narcoterrorism, drug trafficking, and weapons offenses. His sentencing has been delayed, leading to speculation that he may be cooperating with federal prosecutors.
In a 2025 letter reportedly sent to President Trump, Carvajal claimed that Smartmatic voting technology originated as an electoral tool for the Venezuelan regime. He alleged that elections “can be rigged with the software,” though he did not identify specific elections or publicly provide supporting evidence.
Those allegations have long been rejected by Smartmatic, which maintains that it has never been controlled by the Venezuelan government and that there is no evidence its technology manipulated American elections.
Even so, Carvajal’s history as the former chief of Venezuelan military intelligence continues to attract attention whenever questions arise about election technology and foreign influence.
Why Election Confidence Matters
One of the central themes of Trump’s address was that strengthening election security should not be viewed as an attack on democracy but rather as an investment in preserving it.
Every successful democracy depends on widespread public confidence that elections are conducted fairly, securely, and transparently. Even unresolved vulnerabilities can erode that confidence over time.
The United States has repeatedly strengthened election laws throughout its history in response to new challenges. From ballot secrecy to anti-fraud statutes to modern cybersecurity protections, election procedures have evolved as new risks have emerged.
Supporters of additional safeguards argue that today’s threats require another round of reforms. They contend that voter identification requirements, proof of citizenship, stronger cyber defenses, regular audits, and greater transparency regarding foreign intelligence activities are reasonable steps that would reinforce public trust regardless of political party.
Trump concluded that confronting weaknesses openly is preferable to ignoring them.
Whether Americans ultimately agree with every aspect of the president’s assessment, his speech has again placed election integrity at the forefront of the national conversation. In a political climate where confidence in public institutions remains deeply divided, many supporters argue that ensuring every lawful vote is protected, every voter is eligible, and every election system is secure is not simply a partisan objective. They believe it is one of the most important responsibilities of a constitutional republic.
PBP Editor: Since the 2020 elections, we have seen dozens of open source reports and documentaries on election fraud, including the 2000 Mules documentary that uncovered simple and effective techniques for mass election fraud that could have been widely replicated. At the time, we wrote a serious of articles, from our own expertise and from others about the techniques of vote fraud.

Daniel and PBP editors are blithering idiots on this one proving that these sheeples will devour whatever spew stew their felon liar in-chief cooks up. This one is reheated leftover bullshit that not only has been spread since 2020, and before, but thoroughly debunked by Trump’s own experts and outside experts alike. The guy that debunked in 2021, hired by Trump, still works for Trump. And 2000 mules has been totally discredited many times over too.
Let me ask: if Democrats were so good doing this, if the Chinese are so good at this, I mean so good that Trump does not even mention the Russians, then how did Trump with the 2024? The House. The Senate?
Are you really that stupid? Come on man.
Let’s just do this one bombsmell in this giant pile of bullshit: Our Felon what be in charge ruminated: “that the People’s Republic of China obtained access to approximately 220 million American voter files beginning during the 2020 election cycle. He described the operation as “the largest compromise of election data in history” and argued that it represented a national security threat that had been minimized for years.” “According to Trump, intelligence gathered by a White House task force and the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board showed that Chinese actors acquired voter registration files from eighteen states. Those files reportedly contained names, contact information, party affiliation, and other voter registration details.” Remember, Daniel says this is the heart of the matter.
The US, in 2020, had 168 million registered voters. Trump said China picked off 220 million of them. In only 18 states. I will let you do the math. Obviously DO and PBP editors are math challenged.
Trump and PBP claim China stole/hacked/whatevered them from 18 states. For under $32K I will get you 47 states; ten for free. States legally sell or distribute voter file information to individuals or groups upon request for free. Each state has its own guidelines regarding sales. Prices can range from free to $37,000, and the type of data included for sale varies from state to state. As of June 2025:
• Ten states and D.C. provided voter files for free upon request by an eligible entity.
• Twenty-four states charged between $1-$1000.
• Thirteen states charged between $1,001 and $10,000.
• Three states charged more than $10,000.
BUSTED and that was the big one. The rest are just as easy to prove what fools DO and PBP editors be.
Really folks, a little fact-checking avoids chewing all that shoe leather.
I love it! Trump and the Republicans are doing everything possible to hand the midterms over to the Democrats. Everyone knows the election process works, and works well, so why is Trump focusing on that and not on affordability?
One word:
EGO
Trump gets severe indigestion whenever he is proven wrong, and cannot stomach that. His EGO demands that he be the winner all the time.
He is SO insecure!!
Andy and Dunger. And sometimes mike f as in fag. Three queers in a barrel.
Howeird Whitesheeple the closet case is counting queer again as the man can’t dream of anything interesting to say so devolves into sexual innuendos as the closeted gays often do.
Very sad and downright pathetic.
His mantra: you either with us or gay.