Analysis
Trump’s
reversal with call to release Epstein files reveals inability to control Maga
allies
Sam
Levine
President
attempts to save face politically after pressuring Republicans to back off
their pushes to release files
Mon 17
Nov 2025 16.29 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/nov/17/trump-jeffrey-epstein-files-republicans
Donald
Trump’s call for Republicans to back the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files,
an abrupt reversal, is a rare instance of the president being unable to tame
his Maga base and being instead forced to accede to it.
Many
Republicans are expected to support a vote in the US House this week to force
the justice department to release the files. Once the measure passes, it would
still need approval in the US Senate, where 13 Republican senators would need
to join with all 47 Democrats to approve it.
Trump
spent last week aggressively squeezing allies in the US House, including Lauren
Boebert of Colorado and Nancy Mace of South Carolina, to back off in their
support of releasing the files. Those efforts were unsuccessful, and when it
became apparent the measure was going to pass, Trump backed it in an effort to
salvage an embarrassing political loss. “House Republicans should vote to
release the Epstein files, because we have nothing to hide,” he posted on his
Truth Social network on Sunday evening.
For
years, Trump’s Maga base, including people who now have prominent positions in
his administration, have called for the release of the Epstein files,
suggesting there was a conspiracy to protect the rich and powerful. Trump
supported the release as a candidate. But earlier this year, the justice
department said it had reviewed the files and would not be releasing more
documents. That set off more furor and pressure on Trump to release them.
The House
oversight committee last week released a tranche of documents they obtained
from Epstein’s estate, including messages in which Epstein wrote that Trump
knew of Epstein’s conduct. The messages also show Trump ally Steve Bannon
advising Epstein on how to rehabilitate his image. Epstein further corresponded
with other prominent people, including the former treasury secretary and
Harvard president Larry Summers; the journalist Michael Wolff; and Kathryn
Ruemmler, Barack Obama’s former White House counsel.
The
release of those messages has only further increased scrutiny on Trump, and
built the pressure to release everything the government still has on Epstein –
which could be quite a lot, given the number of federal investigations
conducted into him.
Some Maga
influencers have sought to pivot the story away from Trump. Megyn Kelly, the
conservative radio host, appeared to question whether Epstein really was a
pedophile. “There’s a difference between a 15-year-old and a five-year-old,”
she said on her podcast. Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to one count of
soliciting an underage prostitute and in 2019 faced federal sex trafficking
charges for girls as young as 14. Epstein died by suicide in jail in 2019 while
awaiting trial.
The issue
has ignited a bitter split with Marjorie Taylor Greene, a House representative
of Georgia, who has increasingly styled herself as someone in touch with the
real Maga base and has refused to blindly back Trump through the Epstein saga.
“Releasing the Epstein files is the easiest thing in the world,” she told
Politico on Friday. “Just release it all, let the American people sort through
every bit of it, and, you know, support the victims. That’s just like the most
common sense, easiest thing in the world. But to spend any effort trying to
stop it makes – it just doesn’t make sense to me.”
Trump
repeatedly attacked Greene over the weekend, calling her a “traitor”, amid
other insults. Greene decried the president’s rhetoric during an interview on
CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday. “Those are the types of words used that can
radicalize people against me and put my life in danger,” she said.
Later
that evening she posted on social media that she and her family had started
receiving hoax pizza deliveries, and that there had been a pipe bomb threat
directed at her construction company. Pressed on CNN about why she was speaking
out against the president’s rhetoric now, as she had not condemned his
similarly viscous rhetoric in the past, she was evasive.
“I’m only
responsible for myself and my own words and actions … and I’ve been working on
this a lot lately, to put down the knives in politics,” she said. “I really
want to just see people be kind to one another.” She also stressed during the
interview that she continued to support the president and his administration.
But
whether Trump’s reversal will effectively quell the pressure from his base, or
if he will continue to feel the heat – including from some of his otherwise
staunchest allies – will be closely watched.

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