Both the House and Senate acted decisively Tuesday to pass a bill forcing the Justice Department to release its files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a remarkable display of approval for an effort that had struggled for months to overcome opposition from President Donald Trump and Republican leadership.
When a small, bipartisan group of House lawmakers introduced a petition in July to maneuver around Speaker Mike Johnson's control of which bills reach the floor, it appeared a long-shot effort — especially as Trump urged his supporters to dismiss the matter as a ''hoax.''
But both Trump and Johnson failed in their efforts to prevent the vote. Now the president has bowed to the growing momentum behind the bill and even said he will sign it. Just hours after the House passed the bill, the Senate agreed to pass it with unanimous consent once it is sent to the body.
The bill's passage is a pivotal moment in Epstein survivors ' yearslong push for accountability over his abuse and a reckoning over how law enforcement officials failed to act under multiple presidential administrations.
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Democratic state election officials demand answers on Justice Department's requests for voter data
The 10 secretaries of state asked the administration for more information about wide-ranging efforts to seek statewide voter registration lists, citing concerns that federal agencies have apparently misled them and might be entering the data into a program used to verify citizenship.
In a letter to the attorney general and Homeland Security secretary, they expressed ''immense concern'' over reports that the DOJ has shared the voter data with DHS.