Trump Official Promises Bombshell 2020 Election Evidence ‘Soon’
A senior Trump administration official is fueling renewed questions about the 2020 presidential election after declaring that evidence allegedly showing President Donald Trump actually won the race will be released “soon.”
Ambassador Monica Crowley, who currently serves as the U.S. government’s chief of protocol under President Trump, made the remarks Wednesday during an event hosted by Breitbart News.
“He did win in a landslide, and we will soon be able to give evidence about that,” Crowley said, according to reports from the Washington Times.
Crowley did not provide additional specifics about the nature of the evidence, when it may be released, or which agencies are involved.
Her comments, however, echo statements made by several other Trump administration officials in recent months, including Kash Patel, who has publicly discussed allegations of coordinated efforts to undermine the 2020 election process.
President Trump has repeatedly maintained that the 2020 election was marred by serious irregularities and fraud, despite courts and Congress ultimately certifying former President Joseph R. Biden as the winner. Critics of those proceedings have long argued that many courts dismissed challenges on procedural grounds without fully examining underlying evidence claims.
Now, attention is turning toward a federal grand jury investigation underway in Florida.
According to reports, the Department of Justice has brought in veteran attorney and longtime Trump ally Joe diGenova to assist prosecutors in the Southern District of Florida as federal investigators continue reviewing election-related materials.
President Trump himself hinted earlier this year that significant new developments could emerge from the investigation.
During a February appearance on The Dan Bongino Show, Trump suggested that evidence obtained through a federal search in Fulton County, Georgia, could soon reveal “interesting things” related to the 2020 election.
“We have states that I won that show I didn’t win,” Trump told Bongino. “Now you’re going to see something in Georgia, where they were able to get, with a court order, the ballots.”
“You’re going to see some interesting things come out. But you know, like the 2020 election, I won that election by so much,” Trump added.
The president also encouraged Republicans to consider broader reforms to election administration, including potentially “nationalizing the voting” process to create more uniform standards nationwide.
The renewed focus follows a Jan. 28 FBI operation at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operations Center in Union City, Georgia, where federal agents executed a court-approved warrant and seized ballots from the 2020 general election, voting machine tapes, and voter rolls.
Federal officials have described the operation as part of standard investigative procedures tied to an ongoing criminal inquiry. Authorities have not publicly disclosed additional details regarding possible charges or findings connected to the seized materials.
The search has since sparked legal battles and political controversy.
Fulton County officials filed a lawsuit Monday against the federal government, alleging the FBI improperly handled the warrant execution and unlawfully seized election-related data.
🚨 HOLY CRAP! President Trump just said something is ABOUT TO COME OUT about 2020 election fraud in Fulton County, Georgia after the FBI raid and ballot seizure
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) February 2, 2026
He wants Republicans to NATIONALIZE the elections, the fraud is that bad!
"Nationalize the voting! We have states so… pic.twitter.com/aZAT6Xo6gU
Supporters of President Trump argue the federal investigation represents long-overdue scrutiny into election administration practices that were aggressively dismissed for years by corporate media outlets and Democratic officials.
Democrats, meanwhile, continue rejecting claims that the 2020 election outcome was illegitimate and insist previous audits, recounts, and court rulings confirmed Biden’s victory.
Still, with federal investigators now actively reviewing election materials and multiple Trump administration officials hinting at forthcoming disclosures, the issue is rapidly reemerging as a major political flashpoint heading into the next election cycle.
Whether the investigations ultimately produce explosive revelations or fall short of the claims being made, the renewed scrutiny guarantees that debates surrounding the 2020 election are far from over.