In a stunning interview on Fox News, Trump’s Attorney General Todd Blanche told Maria Bartiromo that the Department of Justice is actively investigating the 2020 election across multiple states and claims there is “a ton of evidence” it was rigged.
“There’s a ton of evidence that the election was rigged,” Blanche said. “That’s not something the DOJ needs to tell you about. There’s been evidence about that for many many years.”
He specifically pointed to ongoing activity in Arizona and Georgia, claiming that investigations are still underway and suggesting delays are the result of what he described as efforts to conceal wrongdoing. According to Blanche, investigators are encountering resistance because “they’re very good at hiding misconduct.”
Blanche went further, promising that when the department has something concrete — possibly in a matter of weeks — “the American people will learn about what we uncovered.”
The comments are extraordinary given the position he holds, effectively suggesting that the highest law enforcement office in the administration is actively working to substantiate claims that the 2020 election was stolen, nearly six years after the vote.
Ever since losing to Joe Biden, Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed the election was rigged and turned that narrative into a loyalty test for allies and officials. Those who refused to endorse the claim have often been sidelined or publicly attacked, while supporters have echoed the allegation despite multiple investigations finding no evidence of widespread fraud that would have changed the result.
The question now is obvious: if there truly is “a ton of evidence,” why has it taken years to produce anything concrete — and why is the public still being given vague promises instead of verifiable proof?
The interview raises serious concerns about whether this is a legitimate law enforcement investigation or a continuation of a political narrative that has never fully gone away inside Trump’s orbit.
Critics argue it reflects something deeper: a system where reality is bent to match political loyalty, and where officials reinforce the president’s claims rather than challenge them.
The result is a feedback loop where Trump’s version of events is constantly validated by his own inner circle — even when independent evidence has failed to support it.
Whether Blanche eventually produces anything substantial remains to be seen. But for now, the announcement raises more questions than answers — and keeps a long-settled election back in the center of political fire.
