Opinion
Guest
Essay
Why
Epstein’s Furious Grip on Washington Holds
Aug. 22,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/22/opinion/democrats-republicans-epstein.html
James
Kirchick
By James
Kirchick
Mr.
Kirchick is a contributing Opinion writer and the author of “Secret City: The
Hidden History of Gay Washington.”
When the
F.B.I. released a memo last month stating that it could find no evidence that
the financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein possessed a “client
list” of prominent individuals for whom he procured underage girls or that he
had blackmailed said men, the response from sections of the right was livid. “I
just think that it’s a punch in the gut when regular people go to jail all the
time, when they mess up and do something wrong, and then it always seems the
rich, powerful elites escape,” Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of
the loudest conservative critics to decry the Trump administration’s refusal to
release more documents related to the case, told The Times. (A U.S. District
Court judge on Wednesday denied the Department of Justice’s request to release
more Epstein grand jury materials.)
One can
understand, if not sympathize with, Ms. Greene’s predicament. As a woman who
came to elected politics by way of the QAnon conspiracy theory and once denied
that a plane struck the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, she was bound to be
disappointed by anything other than a story combining elements of the Jimmy
Savile pedophilia scandal, “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion” and Oliver
Stone’s feverish (and fallacious) reimagining of the Kennedy assassination, the
1991 film “JFK.”
Responding
to the concerns expressed by Ms. Greene and other prominent voices on the
right, the House Oversight Committee chairman, James Comer, issued a raft of
subpoenas to President Trump’s former attorney general Bill Barr (who was
deposed on Monday), Bill and Hillary Clinton, the past three Democratic
attorneys general and other former public officials.
It isn’t
just members of the MAGA faithful who are feeling let down by the lack of
vindication for their theories regarding an international pedophile ring. “Do
you stand with America’s children and survivors of abuse or with the wealthy
and powerful who are being protected?” Representative Ro Khanna, a California
Democrat and a sponsor of a bipartisan bill to release the Epstein files, said
last month. “The public deserves to know the truth, and the survivors and their
families deserve justice.”
Six years
ago, the Democratic National Committee denounced “baseless conspiracy theories”
surrounding Mr. Epstein’s death by suicide in a Manhattan jail cell. Today many
Democrats accuse the Trump administration of “hiding the Epstein list” and
insinuate that the files will reveal that Mr. Trump engaged in illegal
activity.
That
elements of the MAGA right and the resistance left have converged on the
Epstein case in a coalition of the credulous makes sense. For the
conspiratorially inclined, Mr. Epstein’s abuse of hundreds of girls and women
is insufficiently horrific. Such a monstrous crime is explainable only if a
shadowy cabal of international power brokers was involved.
To be
sure, Democratic hyping of the Epstein story is motivated less by
conspiratorial conviction than by rank political opportunism; if Democrats
truly believed that Mr. Trump was implicated in the files, they would have
released them when Joe Biden was president. And it’s no coincidence that Mr.
Khanna, one of the most publicity-hungry members of Congress, whose name is
already being bruited about as a 2028 presidential candidate, has emerged as
the loudest Democratic voice on this issue. Regardless of their motives, both
parties are contributing to an atmosphere of growing paranoia and distrust.
Amid all
the speculation and innuendo, it’s important to state some simple facts that
frustrate conspiracy theorists. Aside from that used to convict his accomplice
Ghislaine Maxwell (currently serving a 20-year prison sentence) and charge the
French modeling scout Jean-Luc Brunel (who killed himself before his case could
come to court), I have found no evidence to support the claim that Mr. Epstein
trafficked underage girls for anyone other than himself. One of the main
sources of the allegations that he controlled a harem of sex slaves for
powerful men, a victim of Mr. Epstein named Virginia Giuffre, recorded them in
what her own lawyers described as a “fictionalized account” before she took her
own life in April.
That the
Epstein case has become a bipartisan flytrap for conspiratorial minds is in
large part because of years of reckless hyperbolizing and outright lying by
leaders on both sides of the partisan divide. If you trust Mr. Trump’s claim
that the 2020 election was stolen from him, you are probably more susceptible
to some of the more outré theories surrounding Mr. Epstein.
The same
applies to those who were constantly told that Mr. Trump was a dedicated,
conscious agent of President Vladimir Putin’s Russia. For years, Democratic
politicians and liberal media figures told their voters that Mr. Trump was an
asset of Russia or a personal agent of Mr. Putin. During Mr. Trump’s embattled
first administration, Rachel Maddow devoted several episodes of her hourlong
MSNBC program to endorsing aspects of the notorious Steele dossier, later
characterized by The Times as “a compendium of rumors and unproven assertions.”
Perhaps
the worst offender in this regard was Adam Schiff, then a congressman and now a
senator. A ubiquitous talking head at the time, he exploited his position as
the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee to inform the American
people that he had access to secret information proving that the president of
the United States colluded with the Russian government to win the 2016
election. Speaking in dulcet tones and with lawyerly precision, he appeared the
furthest thing from a wild-eyed fanatic while casting his aspersions.
But when
the Department of Justice released the former F.B.I. director Robert Mueller’s
report in April 2019, it contained insufficient evidence of collusion. His
claims exposed that not only did Mr. Schiff act as if nothing had changed; he
dug in further. If McCarthyism is defined as an abuse of power involving
reckless accusations of subservience to Russia based on insinuation and
hearsay, then Mr. Schiff was certainly guilty of using McCarthyite tactics.
The
amplification of conspiracy theories and other forms of falsehood can have
serious consequences. In 2016, allegations that Democratic political figures
were running a child sex-trafficking ring out of the basement of a Washington,
D.C., pizza parlor led a North Carolina man to travel to the restaurant and
fire three shots before being arrested. Claims that the 2020 election was
stolen inspired the riot of Jan. 6, 2021. Accusations that health insurance
executives are killing American citizens have led some on the left to laud
Luigi Mangione, the man charged in the killing of the UnitedHealthcare chief
executive Brian Thompson, as a folk hero. Beyond the victims of these terrible
acts, untold millions of Americans have lost faith in the democratic process
and resorted to apathy in part because of the hyperbolic nature of our
political discourse.
Using
one’s position of authority and influence to deceive well-meaning people breeds
cynicism, disillusionment and despair. Lying and demonization are hardly new
features of American politics. Political language in the early American
republic could be as vicious as anything heard on a podcast or read on a social
media platform. But the stakes are higher when incendiary accusations and
outright falsehoods can spread so easily and in a country armed to the teeth.
James
Kirchick is a contributing Opinion writer and the author of “Secret City: The
Hidden History of Gay Washington.”


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