Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and White House
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Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Pam Bondi
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Trump, Senate
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Trump’s problem is the nothing-to-see-here approach doesn’t work for those who’ve learned from him they must not give up until the government’s secrets are exposed.
In 2008, Epstein pleaded guilty in Florida on two state felony charges, paid restitution to three dozen victims, and registered as a sex offender. A decade later, Epstein pleaded not guilty in New York to multiple charges, including sex trafficking.
President Donald Trump attacked his own supporters while answering a question about their interest in Jeffrey Epstein.
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Some of President Donald Trump’s most loyal allies in Congress aren’t satisfied by his decision to not release additional files from the Jeffrey Epstein case, and it’s threatening to deepen the MAGA divide he now faces from his base.
Right-wing Republicans have also criticized the president’s stances on Iran and Ukraine, hinting at a broader fraying of his political coalition.
A growing number of Americans have woken up to the fact that Washington operates on hidden interests, often to the detriment of national ones that benefit the average citizen.
A Republican thorn in Donald Trump’s side is joining forces with a California Democrat to seek answers from the administration over sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie–whose opposition to the GOP’s budget bill last month led Trump to demand his exile from the party–teamed up with Rep.
The president said earlier Tuesday that Attorney General Pam Bondi should release "whatever she thinks is credible" in the government's files on Jeffrey Epstein.