Jeffrey Epstein, A House
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President Trump is urging his to move past the Jeffrey Epstein case, but pressure is mounting for his administration to release more.
Maryland Democratic lawmakers are pushing President Trump to release unclassified files related to Jeffrey Epstein, backing bipartisan legislation that would force the DOJ to disclose key
President Trump can’t seem to escape fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein scandal as questions swirl about the meeting between Deputy AG Todd Blanche and Ghislaine Maxwell. Former congressman Conor Lamb and Republican strategist Annalyse Keller join The Weekend to discuss.
President Donald Trump continues to wrestle with the Jeffrey Epstein controversy. He once promised to release the files. Now, it has become a tug of war even within his supporters, as Democrats are not letting up either.
The Jeffrey Epstein morass surrounding President Donald Trump is deepening amid growing defiance by some Republicans and despite the administration’s most inflammatory attempt yet at distraction.
As observer asked, in reference to the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, “What exactly do Trump and his administration need cover for?”
During Mr. Trump's first term, his labor secretary, Alexander Acosta, resigned following criticism of his handling of Epstein's 2008 plea deal when he was a federal prosecutor in Florida. Epstein served 13 months in a jail work-release program after he was originally accused of sexually abusing dozens of girls and young women.
House Republican leaders who have tried to contain the furor over the Jeffrey Epstein files lost their grip on the matter this week — and surrendered control of the wider operations of the lower
Republican Speaker Mike Johnson Tuesday ordered the House of Representatives to shut down early for a summer recess to avoid a vote on releasing the Jeffrey Epstein files. With legislative business grinding to a near standstill over the Epstein drama,
The battle over releasing documents tied to the Jeffrey Epstein case has created a rare bipartisan push in Congress.
Democrats use Republican infighting over Jeffrey Epstein case to shift focus and gain political advantage, highlighting rifts within GOP and Trump administration.