Trump, Jeffrey Epstein
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The Trump administration is facing more pressure over its handling of documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case, with calls for greater transparency continuing despite the Justice Department seeking the release of grand jury testimony.
From the daily newsletter: the fracturing of the MAGA base. Plus: how Dartmouth College became the Ivy League’s Switzerland; and what “Eddington” tries to say about America.
Calls intensify for the release of Jeffrey Epstein's files. House members wrestles with the issue as they gear up for their final week before an August recess .
Americans are turning on President Donald Trump over the Jeffrey Epstein controversy, a new poll shows. The national survey from Quinnipiac University shows that a whopping 63% of those polled disapprove of how the Trump administration handled its probe into the accused sex trafficker, per The Hill.
President Donald J. Trump invents new outrages to chew up news cycles and turn the media away from Jeffrey Epstein. The latest: Sports team names.
Outcry about the Trump administration's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files includes calls by leading Missouri Republicans for the president to order the release of as much documentation as possible to put the issue to rest.
The president seems to have lost his talent for shaping the story of the day. Or did the Wall Street Journal just throw him a lifeline?
Trump denied the report. “I never wrote a picture in my life,” he told the newspaper. “I don’t draw pictures of women.” Trump later confirmed his plans to seek legal action against the newspaper; its parent company, News Corp.; and Rupert Murdoch, the organization’s head.
Donald Trump very rarely loses control of his own story. But the Jeffrey Epstein saga is beyond his powers to quell.
FOX News on MSN4d
Trump tells Bondi to pursue release of more Epstein filesFox News chief legal correspondent Shannon Bream joins 'America Reports' to discuss President Donald Trump’s directive for Attorney General Pam Bondi to pursue the release of grand jury files related to the Epstein case.
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AP Newsroom on MSNAP Exclusive: Trump proposal to limit federal housing aid would impact 1.4 million householdsA Trump administration proposal could put more than a million low-income households at risk of losing their government subsidized housing. That’s according to new research from New York University - obtained exclusively by The Associated Press.