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Clinton Subpoena Sparks Bipartisan Push for Epstein Truth Amid Cover-Up Claims

Rob Finnerty didn’t whisper this week — he slammed the table. On his Newsmax program he pressed the obvious question: why has the mainstream chatter skirted the explosive material tied to Jeffrey Epstein, and why are Democrats conveniently pointing fingers while keeping key documents in the shadows.

House Oversight Chairman James Comer has answered that question with action, subpoenaing Bill and Hillary Clinton and bluntly calling Bill Clinton a “prime suspect” in the committee’s probe — language that tells you this is no longer idle gossip but a formal congressional pursuit. The chairman said the subpoena enjoyed bipartisan backing on the committee and that he expects a legal fight, but he’s confident the committee will prevail.

The core fact that keeps this story burning is simple and ugly: flight manifests and reporting show Bill Clinton flew on Jeffrey Epstein’s jet repeatedly in the post-presidential years, a detail the left hopes you’ll forget in the swirl of smears and denials. Whether it’s 17 flights, 26, or a different tally, the record of those trips exists and deserves plain answers from those involved, not spin.

Conservative hosts and lawmakers are right to smell a setup when the Democrats loudly demand release of selected emails while simultaneously blocking broader transparency. Republican Rep. Tim Burchett and others have alleged Democrats obstructed efforts to fast-track a full release, a pattern that looks more like political theater than a genuine search for truth.

Meanwhile the Justice Department has started producing batches of files to Congress under subpoena, but the initial dump has been criticized on all sides for redactions and for recycling material that’s already public. If the goal is accountability rather than headlines, every page — properly redacted to protect victims — should be unsealed so the American people can judge for themselves.

Senators and members from both parties, including conservative voices like Sen. Ted Cruz, have publicly demanded the full release of Epstein-related materials so justice isn’t fenced off by politics. That bipartisan pressure proves this is not a right-wing fantasy but a cross-aisle insistence that the powerful be held to the same standard as everyone else.

This is where the court of public opinion meets real oversight: stop treating victims and documents as props in a procedural drama. If Democrats want credibility, they should stop leaking partisan narratives and start supporting full, unredacted transparency — and those who cavorted with Epstein must finally answer direct, public questions under oath. The country deserves truth, not theater.

Written by Keith Jacobs

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