Abstract
Chinese Communist Party, CCP, has been upholding the cardinal principle of nonintervention for decades. Yet that was history. In recent years the globe has been forced to pay growing attention towards CCP's interference in the internal affairs of other countries. Differing narratives about the CCP's manipulations of elections have emerged, but most of them are viewed from the perspective of the CCP as a foreign interference, and there is a relative lack of internal stipulation of China factors during the election campaign. In light of this, this essay will tackle three Indo-Pacific countries, namely India, Indonesia, and South Korea, that held elections in 2024. From India's anti-China narrative with sovereignty disputes and border conflicts, to South Korea's US-skepticism and Taiwan Strait disputes in a tug-of-war between the pro-US and anti-US camps, to the issue of how a pro-US and pro-China Indonesia may profit from deals with China, these interpretations have not only become a powerful tool to consolidate the like-minded stratosphere audiences, but also become a leverage that the CCP exploits to interfere in elections to further divide and infiltrate the targeted democracies.