Epstein
discharge petition poised to hit its mark, forcing House vote to release files
by Mike
Lillis - 09/25/25 6:00 AM ET
https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5520512-massie-grijalva-epstein-petition/
Lawmakers
in both parties fighting to force the Trump administration to release all the
federal files on Jeffrey Epstein took a big step closer to their goal this
week.
Adelita
Grijalva’s victory on Tuesday in a special House election in southern Arizona
sends another Democrat to Capitol Hill — and secures the deciding 218th
signature on a discharge petition designed to compel the Justice Department to
disclose the still-concealed documents related to the late child sex offender.
Grijalva’s
endorsement will force a House floor vote on the proposal over the objections
of Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and other GOP leaders, who are siding with
President Trump in opposition to the bill.
The
milestone is highly unusual: Only a handful of discharge petitions have been
successful this century. And it would mark a coup for its lead sponsor, GOP
Rep. Thomas Massie (Ky.), a frequent Trump critic who has accused those in his
own party of protecting pedophiles to prevent embarrassing revelations about
wealthy Republican donors.
“I do
believe that Trump is not implicated,” Massie said as Congress headed into this
week’s long holiday recess. “[But] I believe that Trump is trying to protect
rich and powerful people who are his friends, and that is why this material is
not getting released.”
The
petition’s likely success is also a setback for Trump, who had campaigned last
year on promises to unveil the government files on Epstein, only to reverse
course in recent weeks to say the investigation is over because the whole
controversy was a “hoax” cooked up by Democrats to hurt him politically.
He’s
urging his MAGA base supporters — who have been the fuel behind the Epstein
conspiracy theories for years — to abandon the campaign, or he’ll abandon them.
“Let
these weaklings continue forward and do the Democrats work, don’t even think
about talking of our incredible and unprecedented success, because I don’t want
their support anymore!” he posted on Truth Social last month.
Massie
has been unmoved. And his petition has already been endorsed by every sitting
Democrat and three other Republicans — Reps. Nancy Mace (S.C.), Marjorie Taylor
Greene (Ga.) and Lauren Boebert (Colo.) — bringing the signature count to 217.
Grijalva,
who is replacing her father, the late Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D), has vowed to sign
it as soon as she’s sworn in, which would start the clock toward an Epstein
vote as early as late October. The precise timeline, however, remains in flux.
The House
was initially scheduled to be in session this upcoming Monday and Tuesday, but
GOP leaders canceled those days in order to put pressure on Democratic leaders
to support a Republican spending bill ahead of a Wednesday shutdown. The
revision has pushed the House’s official return to Oct. 7.
Once
Grijalva signs the petition, supporters must wait an additional seven
legislative days before one of them can go to the floor to announce an intent
to offer the discharge motion on the Epstein bill. The Speaker is then required
to stage a vote on the proposal within two legislative days — a timeline that,
if the current calendar holds, sets the stage for an Epstein vote during the
week of Oct. 20, when the House is scheduled to be in session for four days.
The
success of the petition is not a slam dunk, even with Grijalva’s imminent
arrival. GOP leaders still have time to convince one or more of the Republican
supporters to remove their names, preventing the necessary 218 signatures.
Johnson
could also seek to “table” the discharge petition as part of a preceding rule —
a gambit that was successful earlier in the year when GOP leaders wanted to
sink a resolution establishing remote voting for the lower chamber, even after
it had secured the 218 names to force a floor vote. That strategy, however,
would require those Republicans who have signed the Epstein petition to support
a rule that would effectively kill the bill, and there’s been no indication
that any of those four GOP lawmakers are ready to back down.
The
legislation, sponsored by Massie and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), would require
the DOJ to post, in searchable form, every record the agency possesses related
to its investigations into both Epstein, who died by suicide in jail in 2019,
and Ghislaine Maxwell, his former girlfriend who is currently serving a 20-year
prison sentence for crimes related to the sexual abuse of minors.
Johnson
and GOP leaders oppose the legislation, arguing it has little chance of success
since it would still have to move through the Senate, and win Trump’s
signature, to become law. The Speaker is advocating instead for a separate
investigation being led by Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), the chair of the House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee, who has already released thousands
of files obtained under subpoena from both the Justice Department and Epstein’s
estate.
Among
those documents was a now notorious “birthday book,” compiled by Maxwell for
Epstein’s 50th birthday in 2003, which includes a lewd entry bearing Trump’s
signature. The White House has said the entry is fake, and Trump has filed a
$10 billion defamation lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal, which first
reported on it.
Comer’s
team has also orchestrated a series of interviews with key figures in the
Epstein saga, including former U.S. Attorney General William Barr and former
U.S. prosecutor Alexander Acosta, whose secret plea deal with Epstein,
following his first arrest on child sex charges in 2006, has since come under
fire as being too lenient.
“We
continue to believe the Committee’s investigative process is the most
appropriate avenue to provide the American people with transparency and the
survivors of Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell with accountability and justice,”
Comer wrote last week in a letter updating Johnson on his probe.
Massie
and those supporting his discharge petition dispute those arguments, saying
Johnson’s method places too much trust in Trump and the Justice Department
(DOJ) to release information they don’t want made public.
“The
DOJ’s curating all of that, and they’re releasing what they want to release,”
he said. “People are going to go through [the documents] and say, ‘Hey, wait.
There’s nothing new here. This is stuff we already knew.’ And then that will
only incite people to be more upset that there’s no transparency.”
During a
hearing of the Judiciary Committee last week, Massie pressed FBI Director Kash
Patel — who had long promoted Epstein conspiracy theories — on a purported list
of 20 people Epstein’s victims have identified to the FBI as being involved in
Epstein’s alleged sex trafficking.
“This is
not a hoax. There are more names. Those names are not being released,” Massie
said.
“The only
argument for not releasing those names is either the FBI doesn’t think the
victims are credible,” he added, “or they don’t want to embarrass those rich
and powerful people.”

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