Chicago – November 17, 2025
A bipartisan push to force the public release of the federal government’s Jeffrey Epstein files is accelerating in Washington, even as President Donald Trump faces new scrutiny over whether his own actions are aimed at delaying those disclosures.
The effort gained momentum after Republican congressman Thomas Massie openly questioned Trump’s latest move: ordering Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate Democrats with ties to Epstein. Massie warned on ABC’s This Week that the president’s new probes could be a “smokescreen” designed to keep key documents sealed. He suggested the sudden wave of investigations could allow the administration to claim the records must remain confidential because they are now part of ongoing inquiries.
Massie, who is co-leading the transparency push with Democrat Ro Khanna, said Trump’s behavior raises concerns about who the president may be trying to protect. He reiterated that he does not believe the files necessarily implicate Trump directly, but argued Trump may be shielding wealthy friends, donors, and political allies who had ties to Epstein.
Khanna stressed that the focus should remain on justice for survivors and urged Trump to meet with victims traveling to Washington this week. Epstein died in federal custody in 2019 while facing sex-trafficking charges, years after a previous plea deal in Florida allowed him to avoid a federal trial.
Despite months of resistance, Trump abruptly reversed his stance late Sunday, saying House Republicans should vote to release the files because “we have nothing to hide.” His reversal came after a bipartisan petition crossed the threshold to force a House vote, making passage virtually guaranteed.
Yet questions linger. Newly released emails from a House committee show Epstein claimed that Trump “knew about the girls,” though the context remains unclear. The White House dismissed the documents outright, calling them meaningless and politically motivated.
Trump’s directive to investigate Democrats’ ties to Epstein has raised eyebrows beyond Congress. Historically, presidents avoid direct involvement in specific Justice Department investigations. Bondi, however, has said she will move forward immediately, even though her previous review found no new leads.
House Speaker Mike Johnson has argued that releasing the files could clear Trump of any lingering suspicion. But the Senate remains the major obstacle; Republican leaders have not committed to holding a vote if the measure reaches their chamber.
The issue has also fractured Trump’s own political base. Georgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene — one of Trump’s closest allies until recently — has broken with him over the transparency fight, becoming one of the few Republicans publicly demanding full disclosure of all Epstein-related documents.
As Congress prepares for a high-stakes vote this week, the political stakes are mounting on every side. What was once a fringe transparency effort has now become a national test of accountability, partisan loyalty, and how far lawmakers are willing to go to confront one of the most politically explosive scandals in recent American history.
