Trump calls for Republicans to vote to release Epstein files

Hal Turner
Ahead of the House vote this week on a bill to compel the release of the full Justice Department files related to Jeffrey Epstein, President Donald Trump took to social media to call for Republicans to vote in favor of the release, a noticeable change to his past rhetoric.
“House Republicans should vote to release the Epstein files, because we have nothing to hide,” Trump wrote on Truth Social Sunday night.
The president’s comments come after he and House Speaker Mike Johnson have gone to great lengths to prevent the vote from happening.
Just last week, the White House met with Colorado Republican Lauren Boebert in the Situation Room in an attempt to pressure her into removing her name from the discharge petition. That was ultimately unsuccessful, and she was one of four Republicans who joined Democrats for that petition to reach 218 signatures.
Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, the lead Republican co-sponsor of the bill to release the files, told ABC News’ “This Week” co-anchor Jonathan Karl that he expects a “deluge” of GOP support on the measure.
Massie framed the dilemma starkly: lawmakers must choose between the political protection of the president and the expectations of their constituents: how would they justify a vote against transparency?
“I would remind my Republican colleagues who are deciding how to vote,” Massie said. “Donald Trump can protect you in red districts right now by giving you an endorsement. But in 2030, he’s not going to be the president, and you will have voted to protect pedophiles if you don’t vote to release these files. And the president can’t protect you then, this vote — the record of this vote will last longer than Donald Trump’s presidency.”
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters last week that emails related to convicted sex offender Epstein released by House Democrats “prove absolutely nothing, other than the fact that President Trump did nothing wrong.”
None of the documents previously made public as part of civil lawsuits or Maxwell’s trial contain allegations of wrongdoing by Trump.
Trump called the release of the emails a Democratic “hoax” and added “some stupid” and “foolish” Republicans had fallen for it.
Even if the measure passes the House, it would face a second hurdle in the Senate — and, ultimately, a potential veto from Trump, unless lawmakers can reach the two-thirds threshold required to override one.
The public blowup between Trump and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., this weekend underscores deeper fissures within the president’s MAGA base and offers a glimpse of what a post-Trump version of that movement might look like.