The SCIF@TheSCIF
This isn't just happening in South Korea, this is worldwide. This is the global election fraud cartel. Allegations are mounting that Huawei technology has enabled Chinese, CCP-tied meddling in global elections, with hidden devices in ballot hardware, suspicious Wi-Fi signals hinting at hacks, and secret codes allegedly tilting results toward favored parties.
In South Korea's 2020 parliamentary vote and 2025 by-elections, activists called out these tactics, though officials dismissed them as baseless and pursued charges against the accusers.
Why? Because the they know they got caught by the people rigging the elections. People have caught on. The White House voiced broader concerns about Beijing's influence in 2025 U.S. polls, stopping short of direct Huawei ties.
Conservative critics in South Korea point to widespread fraud in the April 2024 National Assembly elections, blaming electronic glitches, mail-in ballot irregularities, and Chinese assistance for the ruling party's landslide. - Japan-forward
These claims echo Trump-era DOJ warnings that China, not Russia, poses the real threat to U.S. voting integrity. - CNN
Facebook axed China-linked pages targeting Trump and Biden, while a May 2020 study by University of Michigan's Walter Mebane flagged statistical anomalies in Korea's election, suggesting fraud could have swung outcomes, though critics argue his model overlooks local systems.
But this isn't isolated, it's part of a shadowy "election fraud cartel" orchestrated by global elites, leveraging interconnected tech firms to rig votes worldwide. In South Korea, Miru Systems, a key player tied to the Association of World Election Bodies (A-WEB), has exported voting tech plagued by failures. Miru's machines in Iraq's 2018 polls sparked fraud cries, manual recounts, and a warehouse fire, in DR Congo's 2018 and 2023 elections, they fueled "cheating machine" accusations amid deadly protests and bribery probes.
The same patterns and the same outcomes keep happening, and the people are noticing:
- U.S. 2020 Election:
Dominion/Smartmatic systems allegedly deleted/switched votes, ties to Venezuelan "Cartel del Sol" and Chinese hardware.
Baseless fraud claims fueled Jan. 6; no systemic evidence found.
- Brazil:
Miru-like tech sparked riots over rigged results.
Overturned elections, protests.
- Congo:
Miru glitches led to fraud allegations, violence.
Landslide wins questioned; international scrutiny.
- Iraq:
Miru machines prompted recounts, explosions.
Flipped winners; corruption probes.
- Taiwan:
China-backed disinformation via TikTok/YouTube.
Heightened interference in 2024 polls.
Chinese hidden Huawei tech has also been allegedly rigging Canadian votes in 2020 & 2025, to statistical fraud signals in South Korea's 2020 polls, echoing U.S. warnings on China over Russia as the real threat. Officials deny, but White House concerns & DOJ echoes grow. Is this the tip of a vast interference iceberg?
The Global Election Fraud Cartel has been connected to similar cases across borders. The allegations outlined in the query point to a pattern of sophisticated election interference attributed to Chinese state actors and affiliated entities, often involving technology, disinformation, and proxy influence. This network—sometimes dubbed the "election fraud cartel" in conspiratorial circles—refers to a loose coalition of authoritarian regimes, tech firms like Huawei, and elite proxies allegedly working to undermine democratic processes worldwide.
While many claims remain unproven or dismissed by officials, substantiated reports from intelligence agencies and inquiries reveal recurring tactics in multiple countries. These include electronic manipulation, statistical anomalies, disinformation campaigns, and economic coercion, often favoring pro-China candidates or disrupting anti-China voices. Below, I outline key similar cases, drawing from credible investigations and analyses for balance.
Canada has faced well-documented Chinese interference in its 2019 and 2021 federal elections, with tactics mirroring the query's Huawei-linked claims. A 2024 public inquiry found China clandestinely supported "pro-PRC" candidates through proxy agents, disinformation on platforms like WeChat, and intimidation of critics. While not directly implicating Huawei in ballot hardware, security concerns led to a 2022 ban on Huawei 5G equipment due to espionage risks.
Intelligence reports highlight "sophisticated strategies" like undeclared funding and media manipulation, potentially flipping ridings but not overall results. Officials like CSIS have called it a "danger to democracy," though Beijing denies involvement. This echoes the query's Wi-Fi hacking and secret codes claims, with activists facing complaints for disruptions, similar to how Canadian inquiries dismissed some media reports as partially incorrect while affirming broader threats.
U.S. allegations closely parallel the query, with Trump and DOJ officials claiming China poses a greater election threat than Russia. Declassified docs and whistleblowers allege massive fake ballots and IDs from China, tied to a global network including Serbia, Iran, and Venezuela. Facebook removed China-linked pages targeting Trump and Biden, spreading disinformation.
Recent shifts focus on local/state races, with Beijing cultivating politicians via economic ties and exploiting issues like immigration. Critics argue these claims fuel polarization, but intelligence warns of "information manipulation" as a top risk. This mirrors South Korea's electronic distortions and mail-in irregularities, with Huawei components allegedly in voting tech—though U.S. probes found no outcome-altering fraud.
This "cartel" dynamic involves CCP proxies and tech infiltration, akin to the query's hidden devices and favored parties. China's interference in Taiwan's elections is among the most aggressive, using disinformation farms, military drills, and economic pressure to sway outcomes against pro-independence parties like the DPP.
In 2018 local elections, Beijing funded proxies, spread fake stories via Weibo and Line, and intimidated candidates—leading to DPP losses. The 2024 presidential race saw tax probes on rivals, tariff suspensions, and balloon surveillance, all to fragment opposition. Taiwan ranks highest in foreign disinformation exposure, per V-Dem reports, with tactics like bot-driven narratives favoring unification.
Australia reports multiple instances of Chinese interference in federal and local elections, including funding Labor candidates and spying plots foiled by ASIO. In 2022, WeChat campaigns targeted anti-China politicians, echoing Canadian cases. Beijing uses diaspora influence to boost pro-CCP views, with economic retaliation (e.g., trade bans) pressuring voters. Similar to South Korea's Mebane study anomalies, Australian inquiries found statistical irregularities in some ridings, though dismissed as non-decisive.
A Global Pattern has emerged with other countries involved.
- New Zealand and Philippines: Intimidation and funding of pro-China candidates, with disinformation on social media.
- Cambodia and Malaysia: Economic incentives and proxy parties to install sympathetic regime.
- Africa (e.g., Zambia, Sierra Leone): Alleged vote-rigging via Chinese tech exports, though evidence is limited.
- Europe and South America: Cyber ops and media manipulation, per EU reports, often linked to Huawei infrastructure.
These cases suggest a coordinated "cartel" leveraging state tech giants like Huawei, united front work, and global elites.
This global cartel is fueled by giant taxpayer programs like USAID, NGOs, and elites, with ties to China (CCP), Iran, and Venezuela, uses shared source codes, overseas servers, and psychological ops to install puppets and erode democracy.
From Huawei's espionage tools to Miru's "glitchy" exports, to Dominion's remote access flipping votes, the elite playbook is clear. Control the count, control the country. If we don't dismantle it, free elections are history. Who's next? Demand transparency.