Trump weighs in on upcoming Clinton House depositions: ‘It’s a shame’
Former President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton agreed to filmed, transcribed depositions in the House Oversight Committee's Epstein investigation after a contempt of Congress threat.
- The Clintons agreed to sit for depositions later this month, with Hillary scheduled for Feb. 26 and Bill for Feb. 27, in the Epstein investigation, Comer said.
- After subpoenas sought closed-door depositions, the committee threatened contempt, prompting the Clintons' agreement; Hillary Clinton said they engaged Republicans in good faith for six months but faced shifting demands.
- Hillary Clinton, former Secretary of State, fired off social media posts on Thursday challenging Rep. James Comer, House Oversight Committee chairman, to hold testimony publicly, saying, `We told them what we know, under oath.`
- Comer said the depositions will be public, with audio, video, and transcripts, and a public hearing is welcome afterward, according to the House Oversight Committee statement.
- The Clintons' attorney, Jon Skladany, said an open, videotaped hearing would best serve fairness, and neither Bill Clinton nor Hillary Clinton has been accused of wrongdoing.
56 Articles
56 Articles
Clintons Will Testify In Epstein Probe
Former United States President Bill Clinton and his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, have agreed to testify before the House Oversight Committee in its investigation into disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. Previously, the Clintons failed to reach an agreement, prompting a vote that led to their being held in contempt of Congress. “By voting …
"If You Want This Fight, Let's Have It" - Hillary Clinton Challenges Comer Ahead of Public Testimony on Epstein - Comer Responds!
Twice-failed presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton lashed out at House Oversight Chairman James Comer ahead of her public testimony on Epstein.
'I like his behavior toward me': Trump says Bill Clinton always ‘understood’ him, even gave Democrats a warning they ignored
For some, elective politics is an eternal bargaining of value systems meant to preserve the principles of a nation. For others, it’s simply a game of ever-shifting alliances. The latter was apparent in Donald Trump’s latest interview, where the president had some kind words for his perennial adversary Bill Clinton, saying that he’s always liked him and sharing how Clinton apparently believed nobody could beat Trump in an election. Trump’s interv…
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