About this site

Built from the release. Checked against the documents.

This site is a reader’s guide to the White House Election Integrity disclosure: 58 U.S. government documents — declassified intelligence products, FBI investigative records, internal emails, and agency reports totaling 269 pages, organized into four pillars.

Two kinds of text appear on this site. The homepage and the “From the White House release” blocks quote the official whitehouse.gov Election Integrity page verbatim. Everything else — every document summary, key finding, statistic, quote, and timeline entry — was extracted directly from the released documents, with no outside reporting or commentary added. Where documents are redacted, the redactions are noted; nothing has been inferred to fill the gaps.

Each document entry links to the original PDF, hosted on this site, so any claim can be checked against the primary record in one click. Full collection ZIPs, as released, are available for download on each pillar page.

The four pillars

Vulnerabilities in Electronic Voting and Ballot-Counting Systems — 8 documents, 37 pages.

China’s Acquisition and Exploitation of American Voter Data — 23 documents, 167 pages.

Michigan Voter-Registration Investigation — 25 documents, 53 pages.

Noncitizens on State Voter Rolls — 2 documents, 12 pages.

From the release itself
White House Task Force on Government Transparency July 13, 2026 1 page

Government Transparency Task Force Statement on PRC Compromise of State Voter Registration Rolls (States Statement)

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In this July 13, 2026 statement, a White House transparency task force announces its first release of newly declassified intelligence records. The statement says the records show China compromised voter registration rolls in at least 18 states, plus more than 200 million voter records not tied to specific states. It names 16 jurisdictions, including Florida, Georgia, Michigan, New York, and Washington, D.C., and says President Trump is alerting Congress and state leaders.

“The declassified intelligence reveals that voter registration rolls from at least 18 states (not all identified by name) have been compromised by the People’s Republic of China (PRC).”

From this document, p. 1
Full summary & key findings

The statement announces declassified U.S. Intelligence Community records showing that voter registration rolls from at least 18 states — not all identified by name — were compromised by the People's Republic of China, and that additional intelligence records show more than 200 million voter records were also compromised by the PRC without state-specific affiliations. This is the first disclosure by the White House Task Force on Government Transparency, which President Trump created in May 2026 within the Executive Office of the President to advise him, through the Counsel to the President, on documents to declassify or release. The records were declassified the week before the July 13, 2026 statement under Trump's direction. The statement says Trump is alerting Congressional and state government leaders to election infrastructure vulnerabilities, and it names 16 jurisdictions from the declassified records: Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island.

  • The Government Transparency Task Force was created by President Trump in May 2026 within the White House Executive Office of the President, advising him through the Counsel to the President on documents to declassify and/or release publicly.
  • The July 13, 2026 statement announces the task force's first disclosure of U.S. Intelligence Community records, declassified the prior week under the direction of President Trump.
  • The declassified intelligence reveals that voter registration rolls from at least 18 states (not all identified by name) have been compromised by the People's Republic of China (PRC).
  • Additional intelligence records reveal that more than 200 million voter records were also compromised by the PRC, without state-specific affiliations.
  • President Trump is alerting Congressional and state government leadership officials to election infrastructure vulnerabilities in the states identified by name in the declassified intelligence records.
  • The statement names 16 jurisdictions identified in the declassified records: Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island.
  • The named list contains 16 jurisdictions (including the District of Columbia), while the statement itself says 'at least 18 states,' noting not all were identified by name.
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