Watching Rob Finnerty unload on Bill and Hillary Clinton for defying congressional subpoenas felt like watching the rest of us finally speak the truth out loud — the Clintons skipping sworn testimony in the Jeffrey Epstein probe is an outrage that stinks of elite immunity. Americans work hard, follow the rules, and watch as political royalty treats subpoenas like polite requests rather than binding orders.
The subpoenas were not a late-night stunt; they were issued by House Oversight Chair James Comer months ago and scheduled for depositions in mid-January, yet the Clintons refused to appear, citing legal objections and delay tactics. This is not theater — it is a test of whether the rule of law applies equally to former presidents and secretaries of state or whether Washington’s inner circle gets carte blanche.
In publicly released letters, the Clintons’ legal team argued the subpoenas were “invalid and legally unenforceable,” calling the committee’s actions politically motivated and warning of what they called an effort “literally designed to result in our imprisonment.” That posture, offered as a shield against transparency, only confirms what conservatives have long suspected: the Left believes rules are for everyone else.
Chairman Comer has already signaled he will move forward with contempt of Congress proceedings, a rare and serious step that could eventually land on the Department of Justice’s desk for prosecution — assuming DOJ does its job instead of protecting allies. If the Justice Department treats this the way it has treated other politically sensitive referrals, there is every reason for skeptical Americans to fear selective enforcement.
This showdown is rooted in real evidence: unredacted Epstein files released late last year included images and documents that placed Bill Clinton in Epstein’s orbit, and the American people deserve answers about those connections, not more delay and stonewalling. The Clintons’ refusal to testify — while insisting innocence — only deepens the suspicion that establishment figures will dodge accountability while regular citizens are held to harsher standards.
Let’s be blunt: millions of hardworking patriots smell a double standard when powerful Democrats dodge subpoenas and the machinery of justice yawns. Rob Finnerty’s gut-level take — that something tells him the Clintons will get away with it — echoes a broader and justified anger across red America about unequal application of the law.
Republicans on the Oversight Committee must not blink, and conservative media should keep the heat on relentlessly until every question is answered and every file is opened. If we cede this fight to the swamp or allow another soft landing for elites, we validate a two-tier justice system that corrodes trust in government.
This moment is about more than politics; it’s about preserving a country where no one is above the law. Americans must demand transparency, insist on consequences for obstruction, and vote accordingly when the next election offers a choice between accountability and privilege.
