Summary
Bill and Hillary Clinton have agreed to testify before the House Oversight Committee in its probe into Jeffrey Epstein after months of delays, rescheduling, and threats of contempt from Chairman James Comer. Originally subpoenaed in summer 2025, they skipped January 2026 dates, prompting Comer to set new depositions for January 13 (Bill) and 14 (Hillary), warning of immediate contempt if unmet. Sources report a reversal as contempt loomed, though final dates remain under negotiation amid accusations of seeking special treatment.
Key Points
- Clintons subpoenaed in August 2025 for in-person depositions on Epstein ties but repeatedly delayed, citing funerals and memorials.
- Comer rescheduled to January 13-14, 2026, rejecting written statements or shorter interviews, emphasizing their unique Epstein-Maxwell relationships.
- Agreement reached February 2026 as bipartisan contempt vote neared, but Comer dismissed their latest counteroffers.
- Only Trump officials like Barr and Acosta have appeared in person so far.
- Clintons’ team claims good-faith negotiation; Comer insists no special treatment.
Conclusions
- The article’s claim of Clintons ‘caving to Comer’s terms’ is overstated, as sources show ongoing negotiations and rejected counteroffers rather than full capitulation.
- Strength lies in detailing the timeline and Comer’s firm stance, supported by letters and bipartisan contempt votes, highlighting real congressional leverage.
- Weakness in speculative tone questioning if they’ll ‘show up,’ lacking evidence beyond past no-shows, while ignoring Democrats’ Epstein document releases showing broader scrutiny.


Leave a Reply