Trump, Jeffrey Epstein
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The House Oversight Committee has released 23,000 pages of documents from the estate of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. We discuss what new information is in the documents and whether the release puts new political pressure on President Trump.
It is almost certain that the House would pass the Epstein bill if it came up under a rule. There are 433 House members currently, so it would need 217 votes if all members are voting and present. If the bill is brought up under a rule, the earliest we could see a vote is likely Tuesday.
Trump faces GOP revolt as House readies vote to release full Epstein files amid new emails linking him to case. Newsweek's live blog is closed.
Jeffrey Epstein’s just-released emails were the topic of conversation on the cold open of the Nov. 15 episode of SNL. The sketch began with Ashley Padilla’s portrayal of White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt taking questions from the press,
We discuss President Trump's attempts to tackle affordability, and a possible House vote this week on releasing files related to the sex trafficking investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.
Grijalva's swearing-in kicks off a procedural calendar that would put the issue to a vote in a matter of weeks.
The three emails appear to be exchanges between convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, as well as the author Michael Wolff and Epstein.
The resolution, introduced by maverick Republican Representative Thomas Massie and co-sponsored by 11 Republicans and 39 Democrats, caused months of heartburn for Trump and party leaders in the House, who have criticized the initiative as a danger to victims and opted to leave disclosures to investigators at the House Oversight Committee.
The House Oversight Committee‘s records include a written exchange between Jeffrey Epstein and Deepak Chopra, a prominent figure in the New Age movement.