Trump reverses course, calls on House Republicans to release Epstein files
- On Sunday, President Donald Trump instructed House Republicans to vote to release files related to Jeffrey Epstein, posting on Truth Social that `we have nothing to hide`.
- Rep. Thomas Massie's discharge petition secured 218 signatures, including four Republicans, forcing Speaker Mike Johnson to bring the bill to the floor amid GOP pressure.
- The House Oversight Committee released about 20,000 pages of material last week, including a 2019 email from Jeffrey Epstein and thousands of private files while the Justice Department still holds witness interviews.
- A House vote is expected on Tuesday to consider unsealing Epstein records, but the bill's Senate prospects remain uncertain and would require President Donald Trump's signature if approved.
- Amid GOP fractures, President Donald Trump withdrew his endorsement of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, while the Epstein Files Transparency Act mandates full release with victim protections and redactions.
309 Articles
309 Articles
For this Wednesday, the vote on the disclosure of all documents relating to the Epstein pedophile is scheduled.
Trump Urges Republicans to Vote in Favour of Publishing Epstein's Archives, Which Is a Radical Shift
By Piper HudspethBlackburn, Aileen Graef and Kit Maher President Donald Trump encouraged House Republicans on Sunday night to vote for the publication of Jeffrey Epstein's archives and to leave behind what he calls a "democratic delusion," which is a radical shift from their efforts to discredit the initiative. "The House Republicans should vote to publish Epstein's files, because we have nothing to hide, and it is time to leave behind this demo…
The US president has so far opposed the release of additional documents about convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
In Massive 180, Trump Relents on Epstein Files
President Trump abruptly changed course on Sunday evening, after months spent trying to block a House vote on legislation to release federal records related to Jeffrey Epstein. The reversal comes as a growing number of House Republicans appeared poised to defy Trump's wishes, with a vote on the bill expected...
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 40% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium





































