By Tom Nichols
Thursday, July 16, 2026
President Trump addressed the American people tonight and
told them that their elections are at the mercy of foreign actors—especially
China. He called the current situation a “crisis” and vowed to prevent any
future elections from being “stolen.” He directed the public to a website where
people can peruse documents that he says prove not only that bad actors have
influenced U.S. elections, but that all of this was kept from him by “deep
state” malefactors during his first term.
Foreign powers do, in fact, try to influence American
elections, but that was about all that the president—who seems shocked that
other nations have preferences about who wins elected office in the United
States—got right. The rest was a mishmash: Much of the previously classified
material that Trump just splattered on the internet does not support his
accusations, and in some cases, these declassified documents actually undermine
and refute his charges.
Trump’s speech tonight rested on a few solid facts
submerged in wild, and even somewhat paranoid, extrapolations. It’s true that
bad actors have accessed basic data about the names and addresses of voters in
several states. It’s also true that China has some pretty strong views about
Trump and probably didn’t want him to be reelected in 2020. (The Chinese wanted
him out because, Trump said, “I was wise to them,” which does not explain how
he was nonetheless hoodwinked.)
From there, however, we slip the surly bonds of Earth and
head into the dark and cold of the space of conspiracy theories. Trump strongly
implied that in 2018, China was on the attack and trying to influence the
outcome of the 2020 election, and that American intelligence operatives plotted
to keep that from him while he was in the Oval Office. He said that attempts to
rectify all of this have fallen “catastrophically short” but that he will take
“swift” action in the coming days.
The documents he offered tonight, though, tell a
different story—so different that they raise the question of whether Trump, or
anyone else in the White House, actually read them.
For example, one of the memos from the National
Intelligence Council (the analytical group within the Office of the Director of
National Intelligence) said in 2020 that the group in charge of cyber-issues
and threats to U.S. elections “assesses that Beijing has taken at least some
low-level, exploratory steps to undermine the President’s reelection chances by
denigrating him and shaping voter perceptions.”
That sounds pretty bad. Except that (as often happens in
the intelligence community) this group was representing a minority view, as it
says in the very next sentence: “Their assessment differs from the IC’s
judgment that Beijing has considered but not deployed influence efforts to
affect the Presidential election.”
So, which is it? The IC (shorthand for intelligence
community) seems to have reached a pretty firm judgment in these documents:
“The IC,” one of the memos says (with some passages redacted),
has seen no evidence that Beijing
is engaged in an effort to influence the outcome of the presidential election,
nor has it observed activity that it assesses is likely the result of such an
effort by Beijing. While we have seen Beijing develop other options that could
be used to influence the election, we have not seen these capabilities
deployed.
Note that what these documents discuss are influence
operations—propaganda, proxies who speak for foreign interests, fake stories,
and so on—rather than interference, which would involve actual
manipulation of data or sabotaging of electoral infrastructure. These
classified revelations, despite Trump’s assertions, show that the intelligence
community didn’t even agree that China was fully engaged even in these more limited
influence operations.
One document says, with more firmness, that the Chinese
were attempting to undermine Trump’s chances and to pressure business partners
into withdrawing support for the president’s reelection. This is perfectly
plausible behavior from a U.S. adversary. Of course, Trump skipped over the
part about other nations, including one where “senior officials” and their
leader were seeking to “covertly influence US politicians’ and political
candidates’ thinking” about the election.
That nation? Turkey.
On one point, however, the declassified reports are
clear. One country, more than any other, actively engaged in operations against
the 2020 elections: Russia. And the Russians had a clear preference:
We assess that Russia is using a
range of measures to denigrate former Vice President Biden and what it sees as
an anti-Russia establishment. For example, it is directing or encouraging
proxies to spread claims about Vice President Biden. Some Kremlin-linked actors
are also seeking to boost President Trump's candidacy on social media.
This isn’t news, but Trump carefully cherry-picked his
way around it. In charts provided by the White House itself that compare
Russia, China, and Iran, only Russia is judged to be actively involved in such
efforts.
Trump not only ignored these multiple (and much more
categorical judgments); he interpreted the normal in-house fighting that goes
on every day in the intelligence community as evidence of some sort of plot
against him. He made much of a comment in a group email—these conspirators were
pretty relaxed about sending their nefarious ideas around to everyone—about
“massaging” the President’s Daily Brief to take out references to the 2020
election. But the conversation was clearly about which product would include
such issues, and how strongly the minority view would be stated. Like so much
else in the speech and the documents, Trump threw everything he could find at
the wall and in the hope that some of it would stick.
So what, then, was the point of Trump’s speech? First, he
is almost certainly trying to soothe his wounded ego over the 2020 election. He
is obsessed with his loss to Biden and wants to blame it on foreign
manipulation. But Trump might also have a darker motive, attacking the
integrity of American elections because he wants to delegitimize the coming
midterms—and perhaps even create the predicate for interfering in them.
The Chinese, the Russians, the Iranians, the North
Koreans, and many other enemies of the United States clearly hope to undermine
the faith of every American citizen in their own elections. But no regime, no
spies, no saboteurs have yet matched the damage that America’s own president
did tonight.
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