Blanche says the probe is alive
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told Maria Bartiromo that there is “a ton of evidence” tied to claims that the 2020 election was rigged, and he said the Justice Department has multiple investigations running in Arizona and Georgia, including Fulton County. That is a serious claim, and it lands with the usual government flair: bold language, careful wording, and a promise that answers will arrive after enough paperwork to wear out a copier. Blanche said investigators are checking who voted, who was supposed to vote, and whether each voter cast only one ballot, which is the kind of basic accounting a healthy system should not need a six-year audit to explain.
Why the case is moving slowly
Blanche said the work is taking time because investigators are dealing with hidden misconduct and the ordinary pleasures of election bureaucracy, which always seems to become hard to find right after the election ends. He described the process as old-fashioned police work, not a magic trick, and said prosecutors are involved as well. That matters because big claims do not become proof just because they are repeated often on TV. They become proof when investigators can show documents, witnesses, records, and charges that hold up outside the studio lights.
What Washington does next
The broader political impact is obvious. Supporters of Trump see the remarks as confirmation that something serious is being examined. Critics will demand hard evidence, as they should. Somewhere in the middle sits the public, which has spent years watching officials, activists, and media outlets treat trust like a renewable resource. Blanche said the American people will learn more once the department has something concrete to release, whether that means charges, a report, or the results of an investigation. In Washington, that can mean days, months, or the kind of delay usually reserved for airport construction and budget honesty.
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