Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian speaking to reporters in Beijing—ANADOLU
Beijing on Friday rejected claims by United States President Donald Trump that China interfered in the US elections.
“The US allegations have no factual ground and are aimed at vilifying China,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian told reporters in Beijing.
In response to US President Donald Trump’s claim in a speech that #China had interfered in US #elections, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said at a regular press conference on July 17 that the allegation was entirely fabricated and a malicious smear that has long… pic.twitter.com/JNMgmaTzFV
— Global Times (@globaltimesnews) July 17, 2026
Trump alleged earlier today that starting during the 2020 election cycle, China acquired 220 million US voter files, calling this the “largest compromise of election data in history”.
In a primetime address to the nation, Trump announced the declassification of intelligence that he said showed widespread foreign interference and serious vulnerabilities in US election systems.
However, Lin said similar accusations “have long been proved to be unfounded”.
“China adheres to the principle of non-intervention in other states’ internal affairs. China has no interest in interfering in the US elections and has never done so,” he said.
By contrast, Lin questioned, “who has wantonly interfered in other countries’ internal affairs, conducted indiscriminate surveillance of governments, businesses and the general public worldwide over a long period of time and compromised citizens’ data of other countries at a large scale”.
The US goes to mid-term polls later this year in November.
Citing a CIA report, Trump had said that in mid-2018, during his first term in office, the policy of the Chinese Communist Party was to “leverage all domestic and foreign elements” that were opposed to him in an effort to reduce the votes he would get in the 2020 election, make him resign, or prevent his reelection.