House, the Epstein
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Jeffrey Epstein, Larry Summers
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The House of Representatives was expected to vote on a bipartisan bill that would make public all files related to Jeffrey Epstein. President Trump, who had long resisted the release, directed Republicans to back the bill.
The House is set to vote this week on a bill to compel the release of the full Justice Department files related to Jeffrey Epstein. Over the weekend, President Donald Trump marked a sudden shift in his stance on the topic -- calling for Republicans to vote in favor of the files' release.
In a video of a gaggle with the press on November 14 released by the White House, Trump says "quiet, quiet piggy" as a female reporter, stood off camera, begins to ask a question about the files. The president then appears to wave a finger in her face.
Stewart showed viewers the 2018 email to Jeffrey Epstein from his brother, Mark Epstein, joking that Russian President Vladimir Putin possessed “the photos of Trump blowing Bubba.” Stewart was astonished by this email, and he didn’t find Mark Epstein’s explanation for the message—that the “Bubba” mentioned was not Bill Clinton —very comforting.
Among national voters, 47% said they think the Trump administration should release the Epstein files with victims’ names redacted. Among Utahns, that number was 56%. Only 3% nationally and 4% of voters in Utah think no documents should be released.
Jeffrey Epstein and Harvard economist and former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers used a shocking slur during a racist exchange about a younger Chinese female mentee, newly released emails show.