The president largely revived familiar claims about fraud, criticized media outlets and urged passage of a bill that would require proof of citizenship to vote.
Read more As GOP seeks to rally 2026 voters, Trump looks backward

The White House and its allies billed President Donald Trump’s prime-time address to the nation on Thursday as must-watch TV, signaling that the president would reveal new evidence of election fraud and interference.
Instead, he largely resurfaced widely debunked claims in a 26-minute address from the East Room, alleging “vulnerabilities” in the nation’s election infrastructure without providing evidence that they were actually exploited.
A cache of related documents released on the White House website Thursday night did not substantiate his sweeping claims that U.S. elections are “catastrophically short” of being fair and accurate.
The address alarmed Democrats, who questioned the impact of Trump’s efforts to sow doubt on election integrity ahead of midterms that will decide control of Congress.
“Recycling disproven claims about an election that took place six years ago doesn’t strengthen our security — it distracts from the real work of protecting the elections ahead,” Leon Edward Panetta, a defense secretary in the Obama administration, said in a statement.
Much of the speech focused on intelligence reports that Trump claimed were kept from him and the public during his first term. But many of the findings were already publicly known.
Trump claimed that members of the U.S. intelligence community and others he referred to as the “deep state” sought to obfuscate evidence that China had interfered in U.S. elections. However, the hundreds of pages of declassified documents released Thursday largely describe intelligence that has already entered the public domain, including that China considered ways to influence American politics in its favor.
A March 2021 report by the National Intelligence Council found that Beijing did not attempt to influence the outcome of the 2020 election. One senior official dissented at the time, saying China took “at least some steps” to undermine Trump’s reelection chances.
Trump alleged that China obtained millions of U.S. voter files that included personal information such as addresses. But that information is already widely publicly available, and two former senior U.S. officials said there is no evidence Beijing hacked U.S. systems.
Trump also claimed that the Department of Homeland Security identified 278,000 noncitizens who are registered to vote in federal elections but did not substantiate the finding. Officials have offered no details on the investigatory process by which these voters were identified and provided no evidence that noncitizen voting has ever been widespread or affected the outcome of an election. The Bipartisan Policy Center has found that in many cases, the people identified in these audits are citizens but incorrectly identified due to outdated information or clerical errors.
The president’s focus on Beijing is likely to antagonize China, undermining the president’s recent efforts to project a warm relationship with Chinese leader Xi Jinping and calm the trade war between the two nations.
The National Intelligence Council found that China opted not to interfere in the 2020 election because it did not want to be caught doing so.
Ahead of Trump’s speech Thursday, the Chinese Embassy in Washington denied any involvement in efforts to sway U.S. elections.
Read more What to know about the Save America Act that Trump is pushing
“China has never and will never interfere in the presidential elections of the U.S.,” spokesman Liu Chang said in a statement.
While prime-time speeches like the State of the Union are often broadcast on major TV networks and draw tens of millions of viewers, several outlets including ABC and NBC declined to interrupt regular programming to carry Trump’s address live.
The networks did not detail those decisions publicly, but outlets often resist granting time for overtly political purposes — and their rejection elicited a threat from Trump, who accused them of being “part of a plot.”
“They want to continue this fraud for whatever reason,” he said, adding that ABC and NBC should lose their government-issued broadcast licenses. “They want to keep it going. They want to protect the radical left.”
Trump has repeatedly suggested retaliating against the broadcast companies that cross him, and Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr has taken unprecedented steps to carry out Trump’s vision.
Fox took the speech live, and CBS preempted programming for a special report that aired part of the speech and explained Trump’s history of falsehoods.
Trump’s claims hit several themes central to his push to enact the Save America Act, which would require Americans to prove their citizenship when registering to vote and show photo identification to vote.
He closed the speech with a call for action, but the legislation remains stalled in Congress four months before the elections that could hand Democrats control of one or both chambers. Republicans have a narrow Senate majority and would need to pick up some Democratic votes to overcome a filibuster on the measure. Democrats said after Thursday’s speech that they would not change their position, warning that the legislation could disenfranchise Americans.
“When it comes to the SAVE Act, the courts have rejected it, Congress has rejected it, even members of your own party have rejected it — give it up,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) said in a statement. “The SAVE Act isn’t going anywhere. Period.”
Although the speech may not accomplish Trump’s legislative goals, Democrats predicted it could sow distrust and discord in the midterms as Trump grapples with reduced enthusiasm among his Republican base.
“Tonight seems to be the ceremonial kickoff of President Trump’s campaign to interfere in the November election,” Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-Rhode Island) said on X.
Isaac Arnsdorf, Warren P. Strobel, Cate Cadell and Jeremy Roebuck contributed to this report.
Read more Trump speech alleges election security ‘vulnerabilities,’ but does not back up those claims