Yesterday, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton sat for a closed-door, roughly six-hour deposition with the House Oversight Committee in Chappaqua as part of the Jeffrey Epstein probe, and Americans watched as she repeatedly punted answers with the phrase “you’ll have to ask my husband.”
House Republicans made clear they won’t accept vague deflections, and the committee has scheduled former President Bill Clinton to testify today, a session lawmakers say could be even longer and more revealing.
The deposition was briefly halted after a photo from inside the room was leaked to social media, an incident that only underscored how much the Clintons have fought public scrutiny and how urgent transparency is for the public.
Hillary insisted she had no knowledge of Epstein’s crimes and described Ghislaine Maxwell as merely an acquaintance — even noting Maxwell attended Chelsea Clinton’s wedding as a plus-one — explanations many Americans find thin given the mounting public records and travel logs.
Republicans on the committee, rightly skeptical, pointed to records of Bill Clinton’s flights on Epstein’s plane and other peculiar connections that demand straightforward answers, not rehearsed soundbites or theatrical indignation.
Even voices on conservative airwaves are watching closely; Judge Andrew Napolitano and other commentators warned that Hillary’s constant “ask my husband” refrain practically hands investigators the very testimony they seek from Bill Clinton and highlights the Clintons’ long habit of deflection.
Patriotic Americans should demand the full truth: release the transcript and video, follow the documents, and stop letting political elites hide behind celebrity and old networks. The country deserves accountability, not another round of stalled answers and partisan cover-ups.

