Key takeaways from Donald Trump’s controversial speech on election security
The president claimed China and ‘deep state’ actors had deceived US voters, but critics say his claims were misleading. United States President Donald Trump has
The president claimed China and ‘deep state’ actors had deceived US voters, but critics say his claims were misleading. United States President Donald Trump has delivered an extraordinary primetime speech, alleging government “cover-ups” and “vulnerability” in the nation’s electoral system. But experts were quick to point out that Trump failed to present any conclusive evidence that past presidential elections had been swayed by malfeasance. In many ways, Trump’s speech on Thursday revisited any themes familiar to the Republican leader. He made broad accusations about a “deep state” conspiracy involving his Democratic predecessors, Barack Obama and Joe Biden, and he lashed out at familiar foes, including the news media and China. For years, Trump has spread baseless claims that his loss in the 2020 presidential election was “rigged” and “stolen”. Trump stopped short of repeating his false claim that he had, in fact, won that race. But in his remarks, he sought to raise suspicion about the election’s outcome, pointing to declassified government documents. Those files, however, painted a more nuanced picture than Trump portrayed, and they failed to substantiate his claims of a conspiracy. After the speech, Democrats criticised Trump for attempting to mislead the public and reduce confidence in US electoral systems, with months to go until the November midterm election. Here are the key takeaways from his address Trump claims China compromised election data One of the biggest accusations of the night was levied against China, the US’s geopolitical rival. “Starting during the 2020 election cycle, the People’s Republic of China carried out what is believed to be the largest compromise of election data in history,” Trump said near the outset of his speech. He claimed that Beijing, through “illicit” means, had acquired 220 million US voter files, including names, addresses and party preferences. “Think of that: Tens of millions of voters’ data in 18 states have been bought, stolen or hacked by China,” Trump said. A spokesperson for China’s embassy denied such claims, saying the country “has never and will never interfere in the presidential elections of the US”. Trump, however, did not say that the information had been used to influence any election. But critics pointed out that such voter information is already publicly available. Some states even sell that public data, for prices ranging from $0 to $37,000, as the US Election Assistance Commission explained in a 2020 report.
The documents declassified by the White House also appeared to indicate Beijing was, at least in part, drawing from publicly available data. It did, however, express curiosity at China’s increasing interest in such information. “While the PRC [People’s Republic of China] government has historically demonstrated interest in US elections, this is a newly-identified interest for this individual actor,” a heavily redacted assessment said. “The US voter registration information is available for public download, with 2021 voter registration information available for some states.” Trump claims a ‘deep state’ cover-up, vows retribution In Thursday’s speech, Trump returned to a conspiracy theory that helped define his first successful bid for public office in 2016: that so-called “deep state” actors had sought to undermine his presidency. He claimed there was a “shadow government” with “rogue bureaucrats” who attempted to cover up Chinese efforts to influence the 2020 vote. They even sought to suppress information from his daily presidential brief, Trump alleged. “ These were briefings I would get almost every day. Everything was kept out that was of importance,” he said. Experts, however, have noted that presidential briefs are usually heavily curated to contain intelligence perceived to be of high importance. An intelligence community report compiled in January 2021 assessed with “high confidence” that China had considered launching an influence campaign in 2020 — but that it eventually decided against it. The report was declassified in March 2021. It contained a minority opinion that indicated China “took at least some steps” to undermine Trump’s re-election chances “primarily through social media and official public statements and media”. The publication of the report would appear to contradict Trump’s claims of a “cover-up”. Still, in his speech, Trump said he had instructed his top law enforcement officials to “fire those involved in the cover-up and to file criminal charges, if appropriate, against these people”. Trump says public ‘blatantly lied to’ about election security Critics had warned that Trump could use Thursday’s speech to undermine confidence in US elections by spreading falsehoods. Some television news outlets, including ABC, NBC and CNN, even opted not to air the speech in full on their main broadcast channels. The timing of the speech is significant, as it comes less four months ahead of the midterm elections, which decide control of Congress.
