Donald Trump, Jeffrey Epstein
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Trump, The Wall Street Journal
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Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein partied together for more than a decade. One became president, the other died in jail.
15hon MSN
Trump drops Epstein-linked names that media ‘ought to be speaking about’ amid files firestorm
President Donald Trump suggested focusing on former President Bill Clinton and former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers regarding the Jeffrey Epstein case amid controversy over sealed investigation materials.
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."
Ankush Khardori is a senior writer for POLITICO Magazine and a former federal prosecutor at the Department of Justice. His column, Rules of Law, offers an unvarnished look at national legal affairs and the political dimensions of the law at a moment when the two are inextricably linked.
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President Trump has come under fire from a section of his MAGA base over his handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.
🚨🚨🚨 Watch Jeffrey Epstein plead his Fifth, Sixth, and 14th Amendment rights when asked if he and Donald Trump socialized with females under the age of 18 during a 2010 deposition: Q: Have you ever had a personal relationship with Donald Trump? A. What do you mean by "personal… pic.twitter.com/JyM5LYJ0C4
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Dems use Epstein files to deflect, but this isn’t a ‘crisis’ for Trump, says political analyst
Panelists Byron York and Matt Towery discuss the Democratic Party’s attempts to deflect and point fingers at President Donald Trump on ‘The Ingraham Angle.’
New polling reveals that the fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein scandal continues to cast a shadow over Donald Trump and his administration.
O’Reilly on Friday also said the “usually pretty accurate” Wall Street Journal, which reported on an alleged birthday letter Trump wrote to Epstein for his 50th birthday, was part of “the dishonest, corrupt corporate media” trying to “convince Americans that Donald Trump had access to Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes and may have participated.”
On his way out the door to a weekend golf trip that’s set to cost American taxpayers at least $10 million, Trump stopped to answer a couple questions from reporters ― and he was awfully cagey when asked about Ghislaine Maxwell.
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who has been a target of recent attacks from Trump, also swooped in: “The president won’t rule out a pardon for a convicted child sex trafficker and Epstein’s co-conspirator. Says he is allowed to do it. Nothing suspicious about that...”
After declaring that “people should really focus on how well the country is doing” rather than his links to the deceased child sex trafficker, Trump floated the idea of cash relief while talking up his latest trade deals on Friday.