It’s been a little under a week since the latest Jeffrey Epstein file release — and it has already become the most reputation-damaging update since the entire Epstein saga began. Now, in a bid to avoid landing on the wrong side of a congressional contempt vote, Bill and Hillary Clinton have agreed to an in-person deposition and say they plan on “setting a precedent.”
Epstein’s new files were reportedly the largest release related to the case. The revelations were as shocking as they were numerous. With every passing day, more information about Epstein’s orbit comes to light. House Oversight Chairman James Comer has now finally received a proposal from the Clintons agreeing to appear before the House, albeit with specific stipulations.
According to CNN, the Clintons had been refusing to testify for months, and Comer is not buying that this sudden acceptance signals surrender. He sees it instead as a diversionary tactic meant to push the depositions further down the line. Comer said, “The Clintons’ counsel has said they agree to terms, but those terms lack clarity yet again, and they have provided no dates for their depositions. The only reason they have said they agree to terms is because the House has moved forward with contempt.”
There is no word yet on whether Comer will ultimately accept the eleventh-hour offer from the former president and former secretary of state. However, House Rules Committee Chairwoman Virginia Foxx told the press that the panel overseeing the Epstein probe will not advance the contempt resolution — but only on the condition that there is further progress toward reaching an agreement for an in-person deposition.
Bill Clinton’s spokesperson, Angel Ureña, was furious, taking to X to write, “They negotiated in good faith. You did not. They told you under oath what they know, but you don’t care. But the former President and former Secretary of State will be there. They look forward to setting a precedent that applies to everyone.”
Bill Clinton has been mentioned repeatedly in the files and has appeared in various photographs with the late convicted child sex offender. Whether being in Epstein’s orbit automatically implicates someone remains a matter for the FBI and the courts to determine. But before it gets that far, Congress will be trusted by the American people to set politics aside and stay focused on what matters here — justice for the victims.
The public’s main concern is not that everyone mentioned is automatically guilty. There is a general understanding that people in the public sphere may know each other simply because they inevitably attend the same events. But the files reveal that not every one of them can credibly feign ignorance — emails show that some who claimed to have cut off Epstein were still asking whether they could visit his infamous private island with their families.
The Donald Trump administration has done its best to push the Epstein file release forward in ways that mirror diversionary tactics. Even if making the Clintons the face of the Epstein saga is the latest attempt to delay scrutiny of Trump’s own relationship with Epstein, that reckoning will arrive in due time.
Published: Feb 3, 2026 08:50 am