Trump, Epstein and Washington
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Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Scotland
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Epstein, Republicans and files. democrats
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We go live with Scripps News Group's National Correspondent Nate Reed as we take a deep dive into the tensions in Washington surrounding the Epstein files, and the potential firing of Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
Fleeing Washington’s oppressive humidity and nonstop questions over heated controversies, President Donald Trump is once again taking weekend refuge at his golf clubs — this time more than 3,000 miles away in Scotland.
His comments come after Trump's top envoy, Steve Witkoff, said yesterday that he was pulling the U.S. team of negotiators out of Doha, Qatar, after Hamas' latest response in the talks, saying it "clearly shows a lack of desire to reach a ceasefire in Gaza."
In 1961, the committee, then dominated by the chamber’s bipartisan conservative bloc, was its own rogue source of power. The chairman, Rep. Howard Smith, D-Va., opposed newly elected President John F. Kennedy’s New Frontier agenda — especially its civil rights plank.
Several Inland Northwest representatives in the House are calling for the Trump administration to release more information surrounding the Epstein files.
We don’t yet know the full story of the Trump administration’s sudden reluctance to release the Jeffrey Epstein files. Its reversal appears to have coincided with the president being told his name appeared in the files,
President Trump has come under fire from a section of his MAGA base over his handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.