White House releases intelligence documents highlighting known election vulnerabilities, but federal assessments continue to find no evidence that foreign actors altered the outcome of the 2020 presidential election as debate over voting reforms intensifies.
WASHINGTON | President Donald Trump returned election security to the center of the national political debate Thursday, unveiling newly declassified intelligence documents that he said exposed significant vulnerabilities in America's election infrastructure and alleged Chinese efforts to collect U.S. voter information. The address also renewed his push for sweeping election reforms ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
Speaking from the White House in a nationally televised address, Trump argued that the newly released documents revealed serious weaknesses in election systems and called on Congress to pass the SAVE America Act, legislation that would impose stricter voter-registration and election-security requirements. He also directed federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies to investigate what he described as efforts to conceal election-related intelligence.
Documents Highlight Security Concerns—But Not Evidence of Altered Vote CountsThe declassified records describe issues that election officials, cybersecurity experts, and intelligence agencies have discussed publicly for years, including foreign attempts to obtain publicly available voter registration information and broader concerns about election infrastructure cybersecurity. Intelligence assessments also documented internal disagreements among analysts over the extent of China's intentions during the 2020 election cycle.
However, neither the released documents nor previous U.S. intelligence community assessments conclude that foreign governments successfully manipulated ballots, altered vote tabulations, or changed the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. Multiple federal reviews conducted after the election reached the same conclusion.
One declassified document indicates that Chinese-linked actors obtained large volumes of voter registration information that was already publicly available through commercial sources. Election security specialists note that possession of voter registration data is different from compromising election systems or altering votes.


















