Bill and Hillary Clinton have been summoned to Washington for a face-to-face reckoning over their ties to the infamous Jeffrey Epstein saga.
Breitbart reported that the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, under Chairman James Comer (R-KY), is digging deep into the federal probe of convicted sex offender Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell, demanding the Clintons appear in person for depositions.
This isn’t a polite invitation—it’s a subpoena with teeth, born from a bipartisan vote back in July 2025 when both Democrats and Republicans on the committee agreed to haul the former First Couple in for questioning.
Fast forward to November 21, 2025, and Chairman Comer fired off a stern letter to the Clintons’ attorney, David Kendall, making it crystal clear that written statements won’t cut it.
Kendall argued his clients have little to offer and suggested a tidy paper submission for “efficiency,” but Comer wasn’t buying that dodge, insisting on live testimony to ensure every stone is turned.
After all, when you’re dealing with a scandal as murky as Epstein’s, a few typed pages hardly scream transparency, do they?
Comer’s letter laid down the law, emphasizing that the committee, not the Clintons or their legal team, decides how oversight works—down to the time, place, and manner of testimony.
“The Committee is not obligated to defer to either your or your clients’ determination regarding the importance or quantity of the information they possess; and it declines to do so,” Comer wrote, shutting down any notion of self-assessment by the Clintons.
Translation: nice try, but you don’t get to grade your own homework on a matter this grave.
The schedule is locked—Bill Clinton is expected on December 17, 2025, at 10:00 a.m. in Washington, DC, with Hillary Clinton slotted for the following day at the same time and place.
Comer warned that any foot-dragging or refusal to show up could trigger contempt of Congress proceedings, a not-so-subtle reminder that dodging accountability isn’t an option.
Given the public’s hunger for answers about Epstein and Maxwell’s crimes, stalling on this would be a bold way to test congressional patience.
Adding fuel to the fire, just days before Comer’s letter, President Donald Trump signed a bill to unseal more Epstein files, signaling a renewed push for clarity on this sordid chapter.
Trump didn’t miss a chance to point out on Truth Social that Epstein, charged by his Justice Department in 2019, was a longtime Democrat with deep ties to figures like Bill Clinton, who reportedly flew on Epstein’s plane 26 times.
While the political jabs fly, the core issue remains—survivors of Epstein’s crimes and the American public deserve the unvarnished truth, not partisan smoke and mirrors.