READ THE DOCUMENTS: White House releases election integrity files after Trump speech
· Fox News

The White House released a trove of election-integrity documents Thursday night following President Donald Trump’s primetime address, posting files related to alleged voting-system vulnerabilities, China’s alleged acquisition of U.S. voter data, a Michigan voter-registration investigation and noncitizens on state voter rolls.
Visit afsport.lat for more information.
The documents, posted on a new White House election-integrity page, are organized into four buckets and include intelligence assessments, FBI files, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency materials and Department of Homeland Security-related summaries covering issues ranging from election infrastructure cybersecurity to voter-registration database threats. The release gives the public access to records the White House alleges support Trump’s renewed push for election reforms, including voter ID and proof-of-citizenship requirements.
The president claimed in his address that electronic voting machines are vulnerable and easily compromised. Fox News has not yet seen evidence supporting that claim and is not able to independently evaluate the accuracy of his statement at this time.
"This vital information has for many years been covered up and hidden from you," Trump said Thursday night during an address from the White House on election integrity. "But that all changes right now."
MORE THAN A QUARTER-MILLION NONCITIZENS MAY BE REGISTERED TO VOTE IN 4 KEY STATES, DHS ALLEGES
The White House page lists the four document categories as "Vulnerabilities in Electronic Voting and Ballot-Counting Systems," "China’s Acquisition and Exploitation of American Voter Data," "Michigan Voter-Registration Investigation" and "Noncitizens on State Voter Rolls." The page says the files span from January 2020 to June 2026.
Fox News Digital could not independently verify the contents of the documents.
In the section on voting systems, the White House says the documents include what it describes as previously classified intelligence assessments and other reports warning that U.S. adversaries could compromise election infrastructure, including voter-registration databases, pollbooks and election websites.
A separate section includes White House claims that China acquired hundreds of millions of U.S. voter files, while another highlights FBI files tied to an alleged voter-registration operation in Michigan.
"Those responsible for sounding the alarm instead kept the information secret and hidden," Trump claimed. "They did not disclose (it) to me as president or to anyone else."
The final bucket focuses on what the White House describes as a DHS review that the White House claims identified noncitizens on state voter rolls.
The documents were posted to the White House website during the president's speech Thursday night, and more updates, filings and findings are expected to drop, according to the new election integrity webpage.
"The documents we will release starting tonight have been gathered by the White House Government Transparency Taskforce, a great group of people, along with the staff of the President's Intelligence Advisory Board, supported by our top intelligence agency chiefs, who have all personally reviewed the findings we are presenting this evening and fully confirmed their authenticity," Trump said during his speech Thursday.
The files were released as Trump has intensified his election-integrity push ahead of the midterms, including calls for voter ID, proof-of-citizenship requirements and Senate passage of the SAVE Act.
Trump previously signed an executive order aimed at requiring proof of citizenship on federal voter registration forms, but federal judges have blocked key portions of the order while the House-passed SAVE Act remains stalled in the Senate.
"No trust, no greatness," Trump told Americans Thursday.