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Trump’s fiery China allegations may threaten superpower truce

Trump’s fiery China allegations may threaten superpower truce

Donald Trump’s renewed accusations that China meddled in U.S. elections could complicate his fragile truce with Chinese leader Xi Jinping just two months before a planned summit in Washington.

The U.S. president on Thursday revived his ‌long-running complaints about voting systems and election administration as Republicans face challenging congressional elections in November. His comments focused heavily on China and included the claim, previously denied by Beijing, that the country improperly acquired data about millions of U.S. voters.

“This data loss presents an unprecedented election security nightmare,” Trump said.

China’s Foreign ‌Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the speech. Before the ⁠address, Liu Chang, spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said: “China has never and will never interfere ⁠in the presidential elections of ⁠the U.S.”

Trump, who frequently boasts of a warm personal relationship with Xi, at times sounded personally aggrieved by ‌China’s efforts.

“The Chinese government wanted (the) U.S. president to lose the next election, and the reason they wanted me to lose is because ⁠they knew I was wise to them,” he said.

Those comments, delivered in ⁠a rare prime-time address, marked a sharp departure from Trump’s more respectful recent comments towards Beijing, which Washington regards as its biggest international rival.

The speech could also derail the carefully constructed truce that paused last year’s trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment on the impact of ⁠the speech on U.S.-China ties.

After imposing triple-digit tariffs on China in 2025, Trump backed off last October amid fears that Beijing’s retaliatory ⁠block on rare-earth metal exports could hobble U.S. manufacturing. ‌Xi hosted Trump for a lavish state visit in May, during which Trump soft-pedaled disputes over Taiwan and called Xi a “friend.”

Trump then invited Xi to visit Washington on September 24, and he is considering attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in November in China’s Shenzhen.

China has not yet confirmed Xi’s visit to Washington. Beijing has privately told the Trump administration that future meetings between the leaders will depend on maintaining ‌positive relations, according to two people familiar with those conversations.

Beijing could, however, take Trump’s Thursday comments in stride.

TRUMP’S HISTORY OF ELECTION-RELATED CLAIMS

His speech was seen as calculated to serve domestic political purposes rather than to reorient policy toward China, according to a person familiar with Beijing’s initial reading of the speech.

Notably, Trump’s 25-minute remarks from the White House’s East Room did not include any call to punish Beijing. That could temper Beijing’s reaction.

This was not Trump’s first time making allegations about China and election interference, which he has used to support the debunked claim that the 2020 election, which he lost to Joe Biden, was rigged against him. Trump officials ​said publicly during his first administration that Chinese hackers were targeting election infrastructure ahead of the 2020 vote.

A 2021 U.S. intelligence community assessment found no indications that any foreign actor, including China, attempted or succeeded in altering “any technical aspect” of the ‌2020 presidential election vote, including voter registrations, ballots, tabulations or results.

In his speech on Thursday, Trump blamed unnamed “Deep State” bureaucrats for failing to warn him about election-security vulnerabilities.

It was unclear if the Trump administration would take any actions against China after the speech, though the president directed law enforcement to pursue any wrongdoing.

Over ‌the last year, his administration has privately warned China that it will protect its national security interests and that it ⁠could take actions Beijing dislikes, according to people ⁠familiar with the conversations.

But the White House has also in recent ​months closely monitored executive-branch agencies’ proposed steps against China and discouraged some new policies that could rile China, according ⁠to another person briefed on the approach.

“President ‌Trump is using a false claim about Chinese interference to push Congress to pass legislation to ​restrict access to voting,” said Mira Rapp-Hooper, a former senior director for East Asia at the White House National Security Council.

“He must believe that his rapprochement with Xi Jinping, including a visit by Xi to Washington in September, will withstand this.”

© Thomson Reuters 2026.

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