House Committee Votes to Hold Bill and Hillary Clinton in Contempt
The Republican-led House Oversight Committee voted to hold the Clintons in contempt for refusing subpoenas in the Epstein probe; passage requires a House majority vote.
- On Wednesday, the House Oversight Committee advanced resolutions to hold former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in contempt, escalating scrutiny in the Epstein probe.
- The Clintons refused in-person depositions, arguing the subpoenas lack a clear legislative purpose and offered written statements instead, which Comer rejected.
- Vote tallies showed cross-party alignment as nine Democrats joined Republicans to advance contempt for Bill Clinton, while three Democrats supported charges against Hillary Clinton; contempt carries a $100,000 fine and one year in jail.
- The full House of Representatives will decide whether to cite the Clintons for contempt and could refer the matter to the Justice Department, with a floor vote delayed until February by Republican leaders.
- Comer scheduled Ghislaine Maxwell to give a deposition on February 9 as recent contempt convictions of Navarro and Bannon highlight increased enforcement in related probes.
342 Articles
342 Articles
A committee of the House of Representatives recommended a procedure to interfere with Congress against Bill and Hillary Clinton. The committee accused them of not having gone to a hearing in the context of a parliamentary inquiry into the Epstein case.
Bill Clinton Keeps Refusing to Appear in Front of Congress, and Now He’s Bemoaning a Contempt Charge
from The National Pulse: WHAT HAPPENED: The House Oversight Committee will move forward with a vote on Wednesday to hold former President Bill Clinton and his wife, Hillary Clinton, in contempt of Congress after the couple scuttled the latest efforts to secure their testimony as part of the committee’s investigation into deceased pedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein. 👤WHO WAS […]
The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee voted on Tuesday, bipartisanly, to declare in contempt former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, after concluding that both defy legal subpoenas duly issued by Congress.Read more
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