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U-Turn on Capitol Hill: House Vote on the Epstein Files

U-Turn on Capitol Hill: House Vote on the Epstein Files

Update: 2025-11-18
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The political dam around the Epstein scandal has finally cracked—and this episode takes you right into the flood. As Congress races toward a House vote on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the hosts unpack how a bill that was once dismissed as a fringe demand has turned into a full-blown political avalanche that neither party can control.

You’ll start on Capitol Hill, where an unlikely duo—libertarian Republican Thomas Massie and progressive Democrat Ro Khanna—have spearheaded a bipartisan push to force the Department of Justice to release its full, unclassified files on Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. The episode walks through what the bill actually does: from demanding flight logs, detention records, and internal DOJ communications to requiring that everything be released in a searchable, downloadable format within 30 days. No more “thousand boxes of paper” document dump, no more excuses. Just data the public, journalists, and researchers can actually use.

From there, the focus shifts to the political shockwaves. You’ll hear how intense public pressure and survivor activism flipped powerful opponents into reluctant supporters. Speaker Mike Johnson’s journey from blocking votes and slamming the bill as “recklessly flawed” to ultimately telling members to “vote your conscience” becomes a case study in what happens when party leadership collides with a furious electorate. The episode dissects his carefully hedged statement, his attempt to punt responsibility to the Senate, and Massie’s blunt response that the only real fear here is embarrassment for the powerful.

At the center of the storm is President Donald Trump’s spectacular U-turn. For months he called the push for transparency a hoax and urged Republicans to oppose it. Then, almost overnight, he publicly endorsed the bill, vowed to sign it, and insisted “we have nothing to hide.” The hosts break down this reversal in detail: the political calculus behind accepting an inevitable vote, the spin from the White House claiming long-standing support for transparency, and the way right-wing commentators raced to reframe the change of course as a masterstroke rather than a retreat.

But the episode doesn’t stop at the headlines. It digs into the fine print and the legal machinery that could still keep key information out of public view. You’ll learn about concerns that a wave of new investigations into prominent Democrats ordered just before Trump’s reversal could be used as a shield—reclassifying big portions of the Epstein file as “active evidence” and invoking standard exemptions that allow DOJ to withhold material tied to ongoing cases. Former prosecutors’ warnings about redactions, grand jury secrecy, privacy rules, and the enormous discretion of the attorney general all come into focus, revealing how a law meant to force openness can be blunted by technical legal maneuvers.

The human center of this story comes from the survivors themselves. The episode revisits the powerful press conference on the steps of the Capitol, where women who were abused as teenagers confronted the most powerful man in the country directly. You’ll hear how Jenna Lisa Jones told Trump that she had voted for him and now considered his behavior on this issue a national embarrassment, and how Haley Robson’s line—“I am traumatized. I am not stupid.”—cut through the fog of talking points and spin. Their emotional testimony, and the launch of a nonpartisan, survivor-led movement to close systemic loopholes, are presented as the moral engine driving this entire moment.

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U-Turn on Capitol Hill: House Vote on the Epstein Files

U-Turn on Capitol Hill: House Vote on the Epstein Files