The Justice Department is pursuing multiple investigations into alleged irregularities in the 2020 presidential election, with federal prosecutors examining activity in Georgia, Arizona, and other states, Todd Blanche said Sunday.
In an interview on Fox News, Blanche said the department is focused on whether illegal or improper voting occurred and whether election laws were properly followed.
🚨 HOLY SMOKES. AG Todd Blanche just dropped a bombshell, confirming the DOJ has MULTIPLE active 2020 election fraud investigations in Georgia and Arizona
"We're very focused on finding out whether the right people voted, whether people that were supposed to vote voted, whether… pic.twitter.com/cZ7oFwzeJf
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) May 17, 2026
“We’re very focused on finding out whether the right people voted, whether people that were supposed to vote voted, whether there was one vote cast per voter!” Blanche said.
He added that investigators are examining evidence that, in his view, has been available for years.
“There’s a ton of evidence that the election was rigged. That’s not something the DOJ needs to tell you about. There’s been evidence about that for many, many years!” Blanche said.
Blanche said the department’s work extends across multiple states and requires a methodical investigative process. He pushed back against questions about why the inquiries have taken years to produce public results.
“That’s what we’re doing in multiple states. You’ll say to me, how long has it taken? Why has it taken so long? The reality of the answer is because it takes a lot of work to uncover what happened in 2020,” he explained.
“It takes a lot of old, good old fashioned law enforcement police work, which is what we’re doing,” Blanche added.
Blanche said prosecutors are involved in the inquiries and promised that the department would disclose its findings when it is ready to take formal action or release conclusions.
“We have great prosecutors working on it as well. I assure you, 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 a result of an investigation, the American people will learn about what we uncovered.”
The remarks come as election security remains a central issue ahead of the midterm elections, with Republican lawmakers and conservative activists continuing to press for new voting rules and additional investigations into the 2020 contest. Legislative efforts, including the Save America Act, have stalled in the Senate. Democrats have admitted that there is voter fraud, they just don’t want to do anything about it.
Blanche did not provide a timeline for potential charges, reports, or public findings. But he said the department would make its conclusions public once investigators have completed enough work to support formal action.
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