The long-awaited moment arrived because House Republicans refused to let another elite cover-up stand, and Americans finally forced answers from the Clintons about Jeffrey Epstein’s web of corruption. After months of delay and legal posturing, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton agreed to a transcribed, filmed deposition scheduled for February 26, 2026, with former President Bill Clinton following on February 27.
This outcome did not come by accident — it came because the Oversight Committee issued bipartisan subpoenas last year and moved toward contempt when the Clintons dodged the process. The committee’s public record shows the subpoenas were approved in mid-2025 and that contempt votes and enforcement actions followed the Clintons’ no-shows in January, proving that vigorous enforcement works when the will exists.
Conservative legal voices and committee members warned the nation to expect relentless questioning, and Newsmax’s preview made clear the tone will not be soft. Republican members on Wake Up America emphasized they intend to press for concrete facts about flights, visits, and Clinton Foundation ties to Epstein-era activity, promising the kind of serious, aggressive accountability the swamp has historically avoided.
Make no mistake: this is about more than headline-grabbing photos and awkward explanations — it’s about whether powerful people used influence to hide monstrous crimes. The Clintons’ earlier legal resistance and the back-and-forth over dates looked less like principled legal argument and more like classic delay tactics until someone in Congress said enough.
Patriots should demand full transparency: filmed depositions, publicly released transcripts, and follow-up subpoenas for anyone who aided or abetted secrecy. If the goal of this probe is justice for victims and deterrence of future abuse, Republicans must not shrink from releasing the record, and Democrats must stop reflexively protecting their elites.
Hardworking Americans are tired of double standards where fame and money buy delays and legal gamesmanship; today’s depositions are a test of whether our institutions will finally act with equal force. If congressional oversight means anything, it’s that no one — not even the most connected former first family — stands above the law, and conservatives should hold the line until the truth is on the table.
