Trump alleges 'shocking vulnerabilities' in US election security
US President Donald Trump has delivered a primetime address in which he accused China of interfering in the 2020 election and alleged "shocking vulnerabilities" in American voting systems.
Trump, who spoke from the White House on Thursday, has repeatedly made unsubstantiated claims about voter fraud and foreign meddling in the 2020 election which he lost to Joe Biden.
In the half-hour speech, delivered three months before the midterm elections, he said he had declassified hundreds of intelligence files which supported his claims that Beijing had tried to sway the election in Biden's favour.
The US intelligence community has previously concluded China did not interfere in the 2020 election.
Trump spoke in front of several members of his top team as he gave his address, but journalists were unable to put questions to the president.
In his remarks, he accused China of the "illicit acquisition" of 220 million voter files including personal information.
Trump said voter data in 18 states was "bought, stolen or hacked by China" and accused "those responsible for sounding the alarm" of not disclosing the discovery to government officials or Congress.
Trump did not present evidence that China had used the information it allegedly gathered to alter voting systems or to influence election outcomes.
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