Blanche Promises Proof of Rigging, Offers None Yet

DOJ evidence – Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche told Fox News that the Justice Department has “a ton of evidence” the 2020 election was rigged against President Donald Trump, but he did not lay out what that evidence is. He pointed to multiple investigations in Ariz
When Acting U.S.. Attorney General Todd Blanche stepped into an interview on Sunday. he framed the 2020 presidential election as a case where “a ton of evidence” exists that the contest was rigged against President Donald Trump.. But as he described what the Justice Department is doing. he never provided the substance of that evidence. nor explained why it had not been released to the public.
Blanche made the claim while speaking with host Maria Bartiromo on “Sunday Morning Futures” on Fox News.. “What I can tell you is that we have multiple investigations going on in Arizona. in Fulton County. Georgia. and that’s exactly what we’re looking at. ” Blanche said.. He also suggested the effort is complicated by partisan resistance to scrutiny. arguing. “This is very difficult because they’re very good at hiding misconduct and hiding what they’re doing.”
He then described the Justice Department’s focus in terms that did not come with specific details.. “And. so that’s why we’re very focused on finding out whether the right people voted. whether people who were supposed to vote voted. whether there was one vote cast per voter. and that’s what we’re doing in multiple states. ” Blanche said.
The remarks landed after Bartiromo played back a clip of White House chief of staff Susan Wiles saying at an event on May 7 that Trump won many of the states he lost in his defeat to President Joe Biden in the 2020 election.. Blanche’s comments pushed the conversation back toward whether the election was unlawfully manipulated. even as he avoided offering proof directly.
Pressed by Bartiromo about why it had taken so long for the Justice Department to disclose what Blanche called evidence “for many. many years. ” he addressed the delay without describing what is actually being held.. “It takes a lot of work to uncover what happened in 2020. ” he said. adding: “It takes a lot of old. good-old-fashioned law enforcement. police work. which is what we’re doing. and we have great prosecutors working on it as well.”
Blanche also told the audience that the end point—whatever it turns out to be—might not arrive in the form many would expect.. “I assure the American people that as soon as we have something to say for it. whether it’s charges. whether it’s a report. whether it’s the results of an investigation. the American people will learn about what we uncovered. ” he said.
But when asked if there would be a “definitive answer to whether or not the 2020 election was stolen. ” Blanche dodged the question again.. “I’m not going to promise there’s going to be a definitive answer,” he replied.. “That wouldn’t be fair to you or anybody else. but we are looking at it. and we’re hoping to get one.”
The pattern across Blanche’s answers is consistent: he points to investigations in Arizona and Fulton County, Georgia, says the work is “old” police work that has not yet produced public disclosures, and frames both arrests and a final, definitive answer as possibilities rather than guarantees.
For now, the Justice Department’s public posture remains tightly drawn.. Blanche asserted there is “a ton of evidence” the 2020 election was rigged against President Donald Trump. while describing ongoing efforts and the subjects they are trying to verify—whether the “right people voted. ” whether “one vote cast per voter” occurred. and whether misconduct was hidden—without providing the evidence itself or committing to a conclusive outcome.
U.S. Department of Justice Todd Blanche 2020 presidential election election rigging Donald Trump Joe Biden Arizona investigation Fulton County Susan Wiles law enforcement investigations