
President Donald Trump delivered a primetime address to the nation on July 16, 2026, outlining new administration disclosures on election security risks and reiterating calls for stricter federal voting standards ahead of the midterms.
The speech noted documents posted on the White House website detailing alleged vulnerabilities in voting systems, foreign data compromises, and noncitizen registrations.
Trump expressed that “Our purpose in disclosing this information is not to weaken confidence in election, but to earn that confidence by confronting vulnerabilities and correcting them very, very quickly.”
"Our purpose in disclosing this information is not to weaken confidence in election, but to earn that confidence by confronting vulnerabilities and correcting them very, very quickly." – President Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸https://t.co/bRU2jrdsI4 pic.twitter.com/oRyxeSE6s5
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) July 17, 2026
Key Disclosures on Voting System Vulnerabilities
In the address and accompanying White House materials, the administration released previously classified assessments indicating that U.S. election infrastructure faces risks from adversaries including Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea. One assessment stated that centralized databases such as voter registration files and pollbooks are “most vulnerable to exploitation.”
The White House also referenced intelligence on foreign efforts to manipulate votes digitally, citing reporting on techniques reportedly developed by the Maduro regime in Venezuela. Officials tied these to broader concerns about electronic voting and ballot-counting systems.
The Dallas Express has previously reported on local efforts in Texas to address similar issues, including the Dallas County Republican Party’s push for hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots in the March 2026 primary due to documented problems with digital poll books and printers.
China’s Alleged Acquisition of Voter Data
A major focus was China’s reported compromise of American voter information. The White House site states that the People’s Republic of China acquired data on approximately 220 million U.S. voters, including names, addresses, and party preferences, beginning around the 2020 cycle. A dedicated data exploitation unit was allegedly assigned to the effort.
Administration officials claimed elements within U.S. intelligence agencies suppressed information about the breach. The disclosures include assessments spanning 2020 to 2026.
Michigan Voter Registration Probe and Noncitizen Rolls
Documents detail an FBI investigation into alleged fraudulent voter registrations in Michigan involving a Democrat-aligned get-out-the-vote group. State police raided the operation in Muskegon in 2020; some canvassers reportedly admitted to falsifying forms and receiving incentives. The Biden-era DOJ allegedly slow-walked the case.
On noncitizen voting, a DHS review identified about 278,000 noncitizens registered in federal elections based on available data. Officials noted the actual figure is likely higher due to limited state cooperation.
Proposed Actions and Legislative Push
Trump urged Congress to pass the SAVE America Act, which would require photo ID and proof of citizenship for voter registration, restrict mail-in ballots to specific exceptions such as illness or military service, and enhance auditability. He has tied the legislation to preventing future irregularities.
PASS THE SAVE AMERICA ACT. 🗳️ pic.twitter.com/Hv72arCSGS
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) July 17, 2026
The administration has directed federal agencies to support state-level cleanups of voter rolls and enforce citizenship requirements. Earlier executive actions in 2025 expanded access to federal databases for verification and updated voting system guidelines to prioritize paper records.
Texas officials have defended the state’s processes while cooperating with DOJ requests on noncitizen removals. More than one million ineligible voters, including thousands of potential noncitizens, have reportedly been removed from Texas rolls in recent maintenance efforts.
Why Election Integrity Matters
Trump stated that secure elections are foundational to the republic, echoing themes from his July 4, 2026, Salute to America remarks on the National Mall where he called for the SAVE America Act to ensure “you won’t have cheating on the elections anymore.”
Every American, whether Republican, Democrat, Independent, or otherwise, should be able to agree that we deserve the most secure, honest, and fair election system anywhere in the world.
Secure elections should not be a partisan issue that divides Americans.
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) July 17, 2026
The White House page summarizes the disclosures as revealing a system vulnerable to hacking, foreign meddling, inaccurate rolls, and untraceable mail ballots, necessitating voter ID, citizenship proof, and paper-based safeguards.
Additional Remarks from the Address
Trump also framed the disclosures as part of a broader pattern of election-related misconduct dating back to 2020, repeatedly describing past contests as “rigged” and “stolen.” He warned that without immediate reforms, similar interference could undermine the upcoming midterms.
Trump directly praised states taking aggressive action, including Texas’s voter roll maintenance efforts and local initiatives such as the Dallas County Republican Party’s hand-counted paper ballot process for the March 2026 primary. He tied these state-level examples to the need for nationwide standards.
The President called on Congress to pass the SAVE America Act without delay, suggesting Republicans consider budget reconciliation if necessary to overcome Senate obstacles.
The address comes months before midterms that could shape the balance of power in Congress.
Provided by Dallas Express






