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Beijing rejects Trump's claim of meddling, but avoids a fight

FILE -- From left, President Xi Jinping of China escorts President Donald Trump to a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Brijing on May 14, 2026. China on July 17, 2026, rejected Trump's claim that it had meddled in American elections as baseless. But its response was relatively restrained. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)
FILE -- From left, President Xi Jinping of China escorts President Donald Trump to a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Brijing on May 14, 2026. China on July 17, 2026, rejected Trump's claim that it had meddled in American elections as baseless. But its response was relatively restrained. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times) NYT

EDITORS NOTE: ART ADV: With photos.); (With: NONCITIZEN-VOTING-SCRUTINY, VOTING-BY-MAIL, TRUMP-SPEECH-CHINA, ELECTION-SECURITY-AGENCY, TRUMP-SPEECH-TAKEAWAYS, TRUMP-ELECTIONS-ASSESS, ELECTIONS-FOREIGN-INTERFERENCE, TRUMP-SPEECH-NETWORKS, TRUMP-ELECTIONS); Murphy Zhao contributed reporting.

China on Friday rejected President Donald Trump’s claim that it had meddled in U.S. elections as baseless. But its response was relatively restrained, a sign that Beijing did not want to let the accusation derail a thaw in relations that both sides have spent months trying to preserve.

Trump had said in a speech that China had carried out “the largest compromise of election data in history” starting with the 2020 cycle, one of several claims he made that was either overstated or untethered from reality.

In Beijing, a Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Lin Jian, said China had “no interest in interfering in the U.S. elections and has never done so,” adding that the claims “are aimed at vilifying China.” It leveled a vague accusation back at Washington for “wantonly” interfering in other countries.

The response was firm but made no demands for retractions or threats of punishment. On China’s social media, commentators who are usually stridently nationalist were mostly quiet.

China experts said this showed that Beijing saw Trump’s speech as an attempt at playing to American voters before midterm elections, rather than a broadside directed at China.

It also underscored a desire on Beijing’s part to maintain a truce that was struck in May during a summit between Trump and China’s top leader, Xi Jinping.

Trump’s rhetoric on China during his address was “definitely harsh,” said Sun Yun, a scholar of China at the Stimson Center, a research group in Washington. But Trump had built up so much goodwill in recent months, she added, “there is some resilience in the relationship.”

Playing the China Card

From Beijing’s perspective, Trump was taking aim at China for domestic political reasons, experts said. Officials in China understand that the Republicans are under pressure as midterm elections approach.

Chinese state media commentaries have argued that Trump has lost some of the support of his political base following his military intervention in Venezuela and the war in Iran. They have noted that he has failed to keep factory jobs at home, while consumers “bear higher fuel costs and inflation.”

Viewed through this lens, Trump’s speech was an attempt at mobilizing voters by fanning the idea of foreign intervention, said Wu Xinbo, an American studies scholar at Fudan University in Shanghai.

“Trump played this card mainly for domestic politics; it was not aimed at China-U.S. relations,” Wu said, adding that this was something Chinese officials would likely not respond to if it was a one-off.

Documents released by the White House that Trump said bolstered his claims suggest there is evidence of a pro-China influence effort and that Beijing was skeptical of Trump. But that was a minority perspective inside the intelligence agencies, and the intelligence officers who held that view said they had only low or medium confidence in their assessments.

China Wants to Preserve the Stability

The U.S.-China relationship steadied in October after Beijing agreed to suspend its limits on exports of rare earth metals, and Washington halved tariffs on China related to fentanyl. “We’re not going to hurt China,” Trump said at the time.

After Trump met with Xi in Beijing, China said both sides had agreed that U.S. tariffs would not rise further. They agreed on a relationship based on “constructive strategic stability,” a vague term meant to signal that both sides would limit hostilities.

During his trip, Trump invited Xi to the White House on Sept. 24, a meeting that officials are now working toward. Beijing expects the upcoming visit to help improve trade ties.

Any disruption to the fragile detente will hinge on whether Trump decides to take additional action on his claims of election meddling.

If Trump were to take fresh actions against China, like putting new tariffs on Chinese goods, Wu said, “China would certainly retaliate.”

The Chinese Economy Needs the U.S.

China may also be tempering its response because it wants to make nice with the United States on trade disputes as its own economy stumbles and as its companies face pushback from foreign governments.

This week, China reported that its economy grew at the slowest pace in three years. It is also facing increased scrutiny in other parts of the world as its exports surge, raising alarm among politicians in Europe and Southeast Asia. Chinese shipments overseas climbed 27% over the month of June, and its trade surplus with the world climbed to more than $125 billion, its second largest on record.

At home, Chinese families are feeling poorer, consuming less and have fewer job prospects. That means that China needs markets overseas to keep its factories churning, grow its economy and create new jobs, said Ja Ian Chong, an associate professor of political science at the National University of Singapore.

“Having more access to the U.S. market could also take some of the pressure off China’s economic relationships with a bunch of other countries from Europe to Africa and Asia,” he said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Video monitors in the White House briefing room in Washington carry a live feed of President Donald Trump as he addresses the nation on Thursday, July, 16, 2026. China on Friday rejected Trump's claim that it had meddled in American elections as baseless. But its response was relatively restrained. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
Video monitors in the White House briefing room in Washington carry a live feed of President Donald Trump as he addresses the nation on Thursday, July, 16, 2026. China on Friday rejected Trump's claim that it had meddled in American elections as baseless. But its response was relatively restrained. (Doug Mills/The New York Times) DOUG MILLS NYT
Jay Clayton, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and President Donald Trump's nominee to lead the nation's intelligence community, during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee in Washington, on Wednesday, July 15, 2026. Clayton dodge efforts to get him to say on the record that Joe Biden had fairly won the 2020 election. (Alex Kent/The New York Times)
Jay Clayton, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and President Donald Trump's nominee to lead the nation's intelligence community, during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee in Washington, on Wednesday, July 15, 2026. Clayton dodge efforts to get him to say on the record that Joe Biden had fairly won the 2020 election. (Alex Kent/The New York Times) ALEX KENT NYT
FILE -- A banner bearing the face of President Donald Trump hangs from the Department of Justice building in Washington, March 26, 2026. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
FILE -- A banner bearing the face of President Donald Trump hangs from the Department of Justice building in Washington, March 26, 2026. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Eric Lee/The New York Times) ERIC LEE NYT
FILE -- Voters cast their Democratic primary ballots in Milwaukee, Wis., on April 2, 2024. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Jim Vondruska/The New York Times)
FILE -- Voters cast their Democratic primary ballots in Milwaukee, Wis., on April 2, 2024. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Jim Vondruska/The New York Times) JIM VONDRUSKA NYT
FILE -- A banner bearing the face of President Donald Trump hangs from the Department of Justice building in Washington, March 26, 2026. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
FILE -- A banner bearing the face of President Donald Trump hangs from the Department of Justice building in Washington, March 26, 2026. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Eric Lee/The New York Times) ERIC LEE NYT
FILE -- An "I Voted" sticker in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Nov. 5, 2024. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
FILE -- An "I Voted" sticker in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Nov. 5, 2024. With allies now positioned in key roles throughout the government, Donald Trump has trained the full arsenal of the federal system on sowing doubt about the security of the country's election systems. (Eric Lee/The New York Times) ERIC LEE NYT
FILE -- President Donald Trump meets with President Xi Jinping of China at the G20 Summit in Osaka, Japan, June 29, 2019. Trump has made a series of claims about China's attempts to acquire American voter data, portraying the alleged activity as a historic scandal. But China's efforts to collect that data have been broadly known for years, and possessing such information would not allow votes to be manipulated. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times)
FILE -- President Donald Trump meets with President Xi Jinping of China at the G20 Summit in Osaka, Japan, June 29, 2019. Trump has made a series of claims about China's attempts to acquire American voter data, portraying the alleged activity as a historic scandal. But China's efforts to collect that data have been broadly known for years, and possessing such information would not allow votes to be manipulated. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times) ERIN SCHAFF NYT
Video monitors in the White House briefing room in Washington carry a live feed of President Donald Trump as he addresses the nation on Thursday, July, 16, 2026. The bottom-line message Trump wanted to leave with the public was this: He is not a loser, regardless of the result of the 2020 election. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
Video monitors in the White House briefing room in Washington carry a live feed of President Donald Trump as he addresses the nation on Thursday, July, 16, 2026. The bottom-line message Trump wanted to leave with the public was this: He is not a loser, regardless of the result of the 2020 election. (Doug Mills/The New York Times) DOUG MILLS NYT

Copyright 2026 The New York Times Company

This story was originally published July 17, 2026 at 1:30 PM.

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