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| Donald Trump used unsubstantionated |
Oh no! He didn't. But he did. Donald Trump blamed China for interfering with US elections. Here we go again.
Trump is reviving his greatest hits of grievance, but this time, the needle is dropping on a track that has the Chinese American community bracing for impact. Without offering a shred of proof, Trump is now claiming that Beijing meddled in the 2020 election, explicitly accusing China of "stealing voter files." He just can't accept that he lost that year.
Trump is reviving his greatest hits of grievance, but this time, the needle is dropping on a track that has the Chinese American community bracing for impact. Without offering a shred of proof, Trump is now claiming that Beijing meddled in the 2020 election, explicitly accusing China of "stealing voter files." He just can't accept that he lost that year.
Trump's intent is clear. If you need a bogeyman as a distraction, blame China or immigrants. In Trump's primetime address July16, he blamed both.
While US intelligence agencies have already thoroughly rejected these allegations and Beijing has called them entirely fabricated, the damage in our current political climate doesn't require facts to do real-world harm. For Chinese Americans, the rhetoric feels dangerously familiar — and terrifying.
A sweeping, unclassified intelligence assessment concluded there is absolutely zero evidence that any foreign adversary modified a single ballot, altered voter registrations, or compromised vote tabulations.
While it is true that Chinese entities compiled data on roughly 220 million Americans, analysts from platforms like PBS NewsHour quickly pointed out the boring truth. This information wasn't stolen via cyberwarfare; it was legally bought and downloaded from ordinary commercial marketing sites and public databases. It is information accessible by any Tom, Dick or Harry.
There was a minor split in the intelligence community, with one cyber official suggesting Beijing used basic social media posturing to sour public opinion on Trump. However, even that dissenting view explicitly stated there was no information suggesting China tried to interfere directly with the election mechanics.
Because the American voting infrastructure is intentionally decentralized across thousands of local, disconnected jurisdictions, county by county, state by state, national security experts reiterate that a centralized cyberattack capable of flipping an election outcome is practically impossible.
“We have seen this playbook before," said the Asian Law Caucus Executive Director Aarti Kohli. "Time and again, the Trump administration has sought to cast doubt on our elections and the Americans who get to participate in them. We’ve seen it recently with his renewed pressure on Congress to pass the SAVE Act, a bill with the clear intent to see fewer people vote."
While US intelligence agencies have already thoroughly rejected these allegations and Beijing has called them entirely fabricated, the damage in our current political climate doesn't require facts to do real-world harm. For Chinese Americans, the rhetoric feels dangerously familiar — and terrifying.
Trump also used the occasion to claim 250,000 noncitizens took part in the 2020 vote although there is no evidence to back that claim. State attorneys general, even those of GOP-controlled states like Florida and Texas, have had to reduce initial claims of thousands of noncitizen voters to only a handful after further investigation.
“Our research this year found that a majority of Americans believe the rhetoric used by President Trump about China and US-China relations has a negative impact on the treatment of Chinese Americans,” said Paul Cheung, president of the Committee of 100, a group of prominent Chinese Americans created when Trump's "China Initiative" began targeting Chinese and Chinese Americansresearchers and academics.
The immediate fallout: Fear and defensiveness
Community advocates and leaders are already sounding the alarm over what this baseless finger-pointing will mean on the ground. The consensus is clear: when Washington targets Beijing, it’s Asian Americans who pay the price on the street.“Our research this year found that a majority of Americans believe the rhetoric used by President Trump about China and US-China relations has a negative impact on the treatment of Chinese Americans,” said Paul Cheung, president of the Committee of 100, a group of prominent Chinese Americans created when Trump's "China Initiative" began targeting Chinese and Chinese Americansresearchers and academics.
Activists in the Asian American community are bracing for a multi-front wave of repercussions:
A resurgence of xenophobia: Just as the "Chinese virus" rhetoric of the early 2020s directly triggered a terrifying surge in anti-Asian hate crimes, community leaders fear this new political scapegoating will paint a target on the backs of Chinese Americans once again.
Civic chilling effect: The fallout is already hitting everyday community participation. Volunteers and campaign workers—like Elaine Peng, who has led Chinese American grassroots efforts—worry that ungrounded political suspicion will make everyday citizens terrified to engage in the democratic process, fearing they’ll be labeled as foreign agents.
The "perpetual foreigner" Trap: Trump's rhetoric repeated by his army of minions, reinforces the toxic stereotype that Chinese Americans are inherently loyal to a foreign power rather than their own home, eroding decades of civil rights progress.
The Feds' verdict: No infrastructure breaches, no flipped votes
The US intelligence community has completely debunked the idea that China manipulated the 2020 ballot box.A sweeping, unclassified intelligence assessment concluded there is absolutely zero evidence that any foreign adversary modified a single ballot, altered voter registrations, or compromised vote tabulations.
While it is true that Chinese entities compiled data on roughly 220 million Americans, analysts from platforms like PBS NewsHour quickly pointed out the boring truth. This information wasn't stolen via cyberwarfare; it was legally bought and downloaded from ordinary commercial marketing sites and public databases. It is information accessible by any Tom, Dick or Harry.
There was a minor split in the intelligence community, with one cyber official suggesting Beijing used basic social media posturing to sour public opinion on Trump. However, even that dissenting view explicitly stated there was no information suggesting China tried to interfere directly with the election mechanics.
Because the American voting infrastructure is intentionally decentralized across thousands of local, disconnected jurisdictions, county by county, state by state, national security experts reiterate that a centralized cyberattack capable of flipping an election outcome is practically impossible.
View from the edge
Let’s be completely clear: US intelligence has found no evidence supporting these claims. But in an election season where anti-China sentiment is standard currency for both sides of the aisle, Trump’s latest baseless accusations are throwing gasoline on an already volatile fire.Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian wasted no time labeling Trump’s claims as "pure fabrication" and political mudslinging designed to stir up voters ahead of the election cycle.
“I hope every American is seeing what is happening right before our eyes: The Trump Administration is flinging desperate and unsubstantiated attacks on our elections," says the Asian Law Caucus' Kohli, "Trump forced himself on your TVs and phone screens trying to undermine your confidence in the integrity of our elections in real time. But we won’t let it happen."
“I hope every American is seeing what is happening right before our eyes: The Trump Administration is flinging desperate and unsubstantiated attacks on our elections," says the Asian Law Caucus' Kohli, "Trump forced himself on your TVs and phone screens trying to undermine your confidence in the integrity of our elections in real time. But we won’t let it happen."
For the Asian American community, specifically Chinese Americans — the fear isn't abstract — it's a matter of daily safety, civic survival, and demanding that political leaders stop using an entire diaspora as a political football.
The data proves the claims are empty political theater. But as Asian Americans, we know the danger isn't the validity of the conspiracy — it's how easily the rhetoric turns our neighbors into targets.
EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.







