President Trump just turned a long-promised demand for election transparency into a live government release.

During his primetime address Thursday night, the President announced the immediate declassification and release of intelligence concerning what he described as serious vulnerabilities in America’s election infrastructure.

He said the first documents would be released that night. By the time he made the announcement, the White House had already opened a public portal with downloadable files.

Here is the moment President Trump made the announcement:

The White House says the newly released collection covers findings developed from January 2020 through June 2026. Its portal currently divides the material into four downloadable groups.

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Those groups concern alleged vulnerabilities in electronic voting and ballot-counting systems; China’s alleged acquisition and exploitation of American voter data; a Michigan voter-registration investigation; and noncitizens on state voter rolls.

The administration is making sweeping claims about what the documents show. Those claims will have to be tested against the underlying files, but the release itself is real: the ZIP packages are live and available to the public.

President Trump said the documents were gathered by the White House Government Transparency Task Force and staff from the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board, with support from intelligence-agency chiefs who reviewed the findings.

A second direct clip captured the announcement as the release was going live:

CBS News independently confirmed that the White House was releasing hundreds of pages of material as President Trump spoke. Its live report said a White House official had previewed five main areas of revelation.

CBS said the administration planned to address alleged voting-machine vulnerabilities, a Michigan voter-registration investigation, noncitizen registrations, security patches ahead of the 2026 midterms, and gaps in government information-sharing. The outlet also noted that voter-registration data is often public or commercially available, so access to that data does not by itself establish election fraud.

The report included one especially important limit supplied by the White House official: the documents were not expected to allege that actual votes were changed or that voting machines were hacked in the 2020 election. That separates claims about data, systems, vulnerabilities, and foreign activity from a claim that a machine changed a certified vote total.

The release lands against a sharply different prior intelligence baseline.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence published a declassified 2021 assessment that said intelligence agencies had no indication a foreign actor altered voter registration, ballots, vote tabulation, or reported results in the 2020 election.

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That assessment also recorded a split over China’s intentions. Most analysts assessed that Beijing did not deploy interference efforts intended to change the outcome, while a minority analytic view concluded China took some steps aimed at undermining President Trump’s reelection prospects.

The newly released documents now collide with that earlier record. The administration is arguing that critical intelligence was hidden and that the public has not been given the full picture.

That is a serious charge. The underlying files will show whether the new evidence supports it.

For years, declassification was a demand. Thursday night, President Trump made it an action.

The release portal is live, the first packages are public, and the fight over what they prove is only beginning.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.

 

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