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Epstein survivors and US House members speak on Capitol Hill ahead of vote on release of Epstein files – US politics live

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House set to vote on release of Epstein documents after Trump U-turn

Lauren Gambino

Lauren Gambino

In July, Democratic congressmen Ro Khanna and Republican Thomas Massie turned to an arcane procedural tactic known as a discharge petition to circumvent House leadership and compel a vote on their bill, the Epstein Files Transparency Act, if a majority of the 435-member House signs on.

House speaker Mike Johnson went to extraordinary lengths to avoid a vote on the the measure, which splintered his conference. Democrats accused the speaker of delaying the swearing-in of Arizona Democrat Adelita Grijalva to prevent her from becoming the decisive 218th signatory. She signed her name to the petition moments after being sworn in last week.

Following Trump’s reversal, several House Republicans, including close allies of the president, have publicly stated their intent to vote for the release of the files, meaning the measure could pass unanimously.

If the House passes the resolution, it would move to the Senate, which would also need to vote on it before sending it to Trump to sign. Republican Senate majority leader John Thune’s office declined to comment on what he planned to do about the bill.

In an interview with Pod Save America on Monday, Khanna, the California congressman leading the push in the House, said he now expects the measure to move “quickly” through the Senate.

In an X post directed to Trump on Monday, Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer wrote: “Let’s make this easier. Just release the files now.”

Key events

‘These survivors are not political tools for you to use,’ says Virginia Giuffre’s brother

Sky Roberts, the brother of one of Epstein’s most prominent victims, Virginia Giuffre, implored lawmakers to “stop talking and act”.

Giuffre died by suicide in April, after years of speaking out about the abuse she endured. “My sister is not a political tool for you to use. These survivors are not political tools for you to use. These are real stories, real trauma,” Roberts said today. “We will not let Virginia’s fight be in vain together. We will not let the predators win together.”

Virginia Roberts Giuffre speaks during a news conference outside a Manhattan court in New York, 27 August 2019. Photograph: Bebeto Matthews/AP

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