On Monday, seven Republican members of the House Rules Committee voted against a motion to even allow a vote—just a vote—on whether the American public should have access to the full, unredacted Epstein files.
Let that sink in.
This wasn’t a vote to release the documents. It wasn’t even a vote on the contents. It was a procedural motion to give Congress the option of debating a proposal that would require the Attorney General to preserve and publish any records related to Jeffrey Epstein.
Five Democrats said yes.
One Republican—Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina—broke ranks and voted yes.
The others? They voted no. And in doing so, they voted to keep you in the dark.
Let’s name names:
These seven Representatives just told the American people: You don’t need to know.
They told survivors: Your stories aren’t worth transparency.
They told every conspiracy theorist and every truth-seeker alike: We’d rather protect the powerful than face the truth.
And they did it while claiming to represent you.
So here’s a suggestion.
If you live in any of the districts above—or if you simply care about accountability—take a few minutes today to let your voice be heard.
Ask your Representative why they voted to block even a discussion of transparency.
Ask who they’re protecting.
Ask why they believe the public shouldn’t see records that could expose systemic abuse and the people who enabled it.
And if you don’t get a straight answer? Remember that next November, you get a vote of your own.
📞 Call. 💻 Write. 📢 Share.
This isn’t about partisanship. It’s about power—and those who abuse it.
If this doesn’t warrant public outrage, what does?