Roy Moore may be back on a ballot soon.

Moore, the 2017 Republican U.S. Senate nominee whose campaign crashed after allegations of sexual misconduct, said Friday he is "seriously considering" another run for office.

Appearing on Focal Point radio show with Bryan Fischer on American Family Radio, Moore was first asked about a potential Senate run in 2020 for Jones’ seat.

"I'm seriously considering it," Moore said. "I think the (2017 race) was stolen. I think that's been pronounced in the national newspapers – The New York Times, The Washington Post even has recognized there was a disinformation campaign going on in September of 2017 by forces outside of Alabama that spent a lot of money not regulated by the FEC in trying to dissuade Republicans from voting and encourage and enrage Democrats."

The comments are Moore's strongest publicly about a run for office. In an interview with AL.com in January, Moore said he was focused more on the lawsuits resulting from the allegations than another political campaign.

Moore, twice elected chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court who was forced from office before his term ended each time, has repeatedly denied the allegations made against him about a month before the election narrowly won by Doug Jones.

“I’m not thinking about the future,” Moore told AL.com when asked if he could envision running for office again. “I’m just dealing with the problems of the past. If we don’t get it straight today, I don’t know where the future will be. If I ever decide to do something, I’ll let it be known. But right now, I’m concentrating on what’s before me. I’ve got plenty of court cases going on right now.”

On his Facebook page in recent weeks, Moore has shared stories about Jones opposing President Trump and raising campaign funds from sources overseas.

He also got into a public spat with Jones two weeks ago when the senator urged Moore to run for office if he thought the 2017 was stolen.

“Let’s just do it again,” Jones told Politico.

Moore responded the next day, saying, "When and if I decide to run, he will be the first to know.”

Moore’s appearance Friday on Focal Point begins at the 19-minute mark of the video above.

Moore has been critical of two disinformation campaigns waged by Democrats against Moore during the Senate race, going so far as to first say the seat was stolen in another interview on Fischer’s radio show in January.

“Well, I have no doubt it was stolen,” Moore said on the radio show. “I have no doubt this influenced the campaign. And to say it didn’t would contradict even the report that came out on Project Birmingham. It’s no coincidence this Project Birmingham originated as early as September 2017 before the false allegations came up. I think it was all a plan. I think it was all a plot."

In the January interview with AL.com, Moore spoke of the disinformation campaigns.

“If you put out bad information that’s intended to alter the election, that’s bad for people,” Moore said. “It’s not my concern or sour grapes about the election. It’s over and done and what’s done is done. But I want to stop, I want to see this disinformation stuff stopped. I don’t know if I have any effect on it or what.”

U.S. Rep. Bradley Byrne of Fairhope is the only Republican to formally announce a campaign for the Senate in 2020.