logo
JD Vance's silence on Epstein after previous demand for 'list' drives MAGA mad in dire signs for 2028

JD Vance's silence on Epstein after previous demand for 'list' drives MAGA mad in dire signs for 2028

Daily Mail​5 days ago
Vice President JD Vance continues his silence on the ongoing controversy surrounding the administration's handling of the Jefferey Epstein case, despite a long history of advocating for more government transparency.
Attorney General Pam Bondi released findings from the Justice Department last week claiming that Epstein did not have a 'client list' and there were no more files related to his death in prison or the sex trafficking investigation against him.
Prior to taking office as vice president, Vance publicly expressed his belief that a client list existed - and that the public deserved to see it.
'What possible interest would the US government have in keeping Epstein's clients secret? Oh…,' he wrote on December 30, 2021 on X.
At the time, Vance reposted prominent MAGA supporter Jack Posobiec's comments highlighting a report and wrote, 'The DOJ and Ghislaine Maxwell 's lawyers have made a deal that her 'little black book' of contacts will never be made public.'
That prompted Vance to rant at the journalists failing to grill politicians hard enough about the Epstein files.
'If you're a journalist and you're not asking questions about this case you should be ashamed of yourself,' he said.
'What purpose do you even serve? I'm sure there's a middle class teenager somewhere who could use some harassing right now but maybe try to do your job once in a while.'
Vice President JD Vance checks his phone before his interview with Bret Baier, right, on FOX News Channel's Special Report with Bret Baier at the FOX News bureau in Washington.
The Vice President also raised Epstein's case in September 2021.
'Remember when we learned that our wealthiest and most powerful people were connected to a guy who ran a literal child sex trafficking ring? And then that guy died mysteriously in a jail? And now we just don't talk about it,' he wrote, sharing an article published by The Week titled: 'The Jeffrey Epstein case is why people believe in Pizzagate. A mysterious cabal of billionaires and politicians and Hollywood bigwigs running an international sex trafficking ring — ridiculous, right?'
Vance said he thought about the contents of the article 'about once a month.'
As early as 2021, posts made to X seen by DailyMail.com prove Vance staunchly believed a client list existed - and that the public deserved to see it
When he was running for vice president, Vance also spoke to comedian and podcaster Theo Von about the importance of releasing the Epstein list.
'Seriously, we need to release the Epstein list. That is an important thing,' he said in his interview with Von in November 2024 that now has over seven million views on YouTube.
The vice president's office did not respond to a Daily Mail request for comment.
President Trump dismissed a reporter last week who asked him about the Epstein files.
'Are you still talking about Epstein? This guy has been talked about for years. Are people still talking about this creep? I can't believe you're asking a question about Epstein,' he said dismissively.
Critics of the Trump administration's handling of the Epstein case raged against the vice president on social media.
'If you're the VP and you're not asking questions about this case you should be ashamed of yourself. What purpose do you even serve?' wrote one critic on social media.
'I firmly believe this just cost him any chance of the 2028 election, if he decided to run,' wrote another critic.
Vance spent the weekend with his family at Disneyland, publicly distancing himself from the controversy that threatened to divide Trump's cabinet. He also shared social media photos of hiking with the Marines at Camp Pendleton.
Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino threatened to quit his position over the Justice Department's handling of the Epstein files, demanding that either Bondi lose her job.
But the president revealed Sunday that he had spoken with Bongino and said he believed the former MAGA podcaster would remain in the administration.
'I spoke to him today,' Trump said. 'Dan Bongino, very good guy. I've known him a long time. I've done his show many, many times. He sounded terrific, actually.'
A White House insider told the Daily Mail that behind the scenes, Vance also spoke to Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel urging them to stick around despite their disappointment with the handling of Bondi's review.
Vance also plans to visit Pennsylvania on Wednesday to tout the benefits of President Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' in an attempt to refocus the public conversation on the economy.
Trump also lectured his supporters on social media for their focus on Epstein, dismissing it as a distraction.
'What's going on with my 'boys' and, in some cases, 'gals?,' Trump posted to Truth Social on Saturday afternoon. 'They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB! We're on one Team, MAGA, and I don't like what's happening.'
On Monday, the White House indicated that any further comments on the Epstein case would be subject to Trump's approval.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Long lost ‘Chappaquiddick' tapes found by son of reporter investigating Ted Kennedy crash
Long lost ‘Chappaquiddick' tapes found by son of reporter investigating Ted Kennedy crash

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Long lost ‘Chappaquiddick' tapes found by son of reporter investigating Ted Kennedy crash

The son of the investigative journalist who literally wrote the book on Senator Ted Kennedy's Chappaquiddick car crash scandal has discovered his father's long-lost investigation audiotapes, according to a report in PEOPLE. Nick Damore, the son of investigative journalist Leo Damore, has been searching for his father's audiotapes for years. His father, Leo Damore, is the author of the 1988 blockbuster book Senatorial Privilege, which explored Kennedy's 1969 car accident in Martha's Vineyard that resulted in the death of his passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne. Kennedy waited 10 hours before alerting the police about his crash and the death of his passenger. Why he did so is still unknown. 'Leo Damore's book went on to sell more than a million copies. It took him eight years to produce the book and required more than 200 interviews, many of which were recorded on audiotapes. In 1995, Leo Damore died by suicide, and many of his documents and tapes disappeared in the aftermath. Among the Chappaquiddick tapes that disappeared were interview recordings of Joe Gargan, Kennedy's cousin, who was at a reunion party with the senator on the night Kopechne died. Nick Damore, who teaches middle school in Connecticut, was only 10 when his father died, and has spent years trying to track down his father's tapes. In 2021, he received a call from an attorney telling him that one of his father's lawyers, Harold Fields, had found a briefcase belonging to his father. 'They'd been cleaning out his house," Nick told PEOPLE, "and they found a briefcase under a bed that said 'Leo Damore vs. Ted Kennedy' and that had all the tapes.' The case contained nine bundles of tapes that included interviews with attorneys, investigators, and other figures closely associated with the case. "It's fascinating to hear Leo in his element," Nick said of his father. "It's like you're watching a master at work." The Gargan interviews are among the tapes located in the briefcase. At the time of the incident, Gargan claimed that he, attorney Paul Markham, and his cousin, Kennedy, had traveled to the bridge where Kennedy's car had gone off the road and into the water below in an attempt to rescue Kopechne. Gargan later changed his story and claimed that Kennedy had instructed him to lie about the events of the night and to claim that Kopechne was driving at the time of the crash. He said he refused to blame the woman. "They were interested in protecting the senator, there's no question about that," Gargan told Leo Damore in one of the interviews. "And they let us fend for ourselves. As well as everybody else." Most of what's contained on the tapes never made it into Leo Damore's book, so his son is doing his best to listen to all of the newly discovered audio logs and make sense of the story his father spent so many years working to tell. 'I'm just scratching the surface," Nick Damore said.

Joe Rogan twists the knife on Trump as he urges liberal lawmaker to run for president
Joe Rogan twists the knife on Trump as he urges liberal lawmaker to run for president

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Joe Rogan twists the knife on Trump as he urges liberal lawmaker to run for president

Joe Rogan took another shot at former buddy Donald Trump as he urged a liberal Texas lawmaker to run for president because, 'we need someone who is actually a good person.' The podcaster fawned over Democratic Texas state Rep. James Talarico on his show on Friday, telling the 36-year-old to bring in a new generation of leadership. Talarico is a former teacher who joined the Texas state legislature in 2018 at just 28. He often receives millions of views on Instagram clips where he shares his speeches and previously argued there are 'six genders'. He is known as a devoutly religious lawmaker who rails against the rise of 'Christian Nationalism' on the right, a topic that earned Rogan's seal of approval this week. After being told by Rogan to seek the White House, Talarico brushed off the remark. 'Can I actually push back on that?' he responded. 'We were talking about how politics has become a religion. This is one of the ways it does. People put all their faith in a politician.' Talarico name checked Trump and former Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders as examples, saying that while he 'likes Bernie... some people treat him as if he's a messianic figure.' Rogan, who endorsed Trump for president last year, appeared to insult Trump as he told Talarico to run for the White House telling Talarico (pictured) 'we need someone who is actually a good person' Rogan's shot at Trump is the latest in a string of breaks from the president following his endorsement of him last year. This week, he slammed Trump's bungled handling of the 'Epstein files', saying it appeared the White House was lying to the American people because 'they've got videotape and all of a sudden they don't.' He has also used his massive podcast platform to criticize Trump for some ICE raids on illegal immigrants without criminal records and has described his feud with Canada as 'stupid' in recent episodes. Talarico - an aspiring preacher who is in seminary school - said on Rogan's show this week that the 'problem' with modern politics comes from voters seeing politicians as deities, and argued that those in office are far from perfect. After the state rep. cited Bernie Sanders as an example, Rogan countered that he 'is one of the only ones that has been remarkably consistent his entire career.' 'I know, but he's still a flawed human being, right? Just like we all are,' Talarico responded. 'The change is going to come from your listeners, not from me. I can be a part of that.' The high-profile interview comes as Talarico is seen as a rising star in the Democratic Party, and is said to be mulling an underdog bid for the US Senate. The high-profile interview comes as Talarico (pictured recently with his niece) is seen as a rising star in the Democratic Party, and is said to be mulling an underdog bid for the US Senate Rogan, a former liberal who endorsed Trump in the presidential campaign, asked Talarico why he is a Democrat on the show. 'My mother saw Texas Democrats who fought for the little guy, for working people, people who were forgotten and left behind,' Talarico responded, saying that the party has lost its way in recent times. 'That was the classic Democratic Party.' After slamming Trump with an apparent insult at how America needs a president who is 'actually a good person ', Rogan also hit out at the Republican Party. He singled out Republicans who have introduced strict abortion policies in recent years, which he described as 'very creepy.' Talarico has raised eyebrows with some past remarks, including in 2021 when he argued in the Texas statehouse that there are 'six genders.' 'The point is that biologically speaking, scientifically speaking, sex is a spectrum, and oftentimes can be very ambiguous,' he said at the time, per the New York Post. Immediately following his interview with Rogan, Talarico told Politico that he went on the show of the influential podcaster to turn him back to the liberal side, despite his endorsement of Trump last year. 'He speaks for a lot of people who don't feel like they belong in either political party, and are rightly suspicious of a corrupt political system,' Talarico said. He said he was surprised to be invited by Rogan onto the show, which came after the podcaster saw one of his viral social media videos where he explained his opposition to posting the Ten Commandments in public schools. 'When we got the email invitation, I originally thought it was a phishing scam,' he said. 'But we called them and realized it was legit, and it was a surprise — just given that I'm a state rep. — to get invited on such a big national platform. He said he had seen some of my videos and wanted to talk. So we jumped at the opportunity.' Asked about Rogan's turn towards conservatism, he added: 'After sitting with him for two and a half hours, I have a clearer understanding of where he's coming from on a lot of this stuff. 'I just got the overwhelming impression that Joe Rogan is not loyal to either political party, and is deeply skeptical of our political system as a whole. I think that skepticism also applies to Donald Trump, just like it did to Joe Biden last year.'

Clay Travis thinks Stephen Colbert's anti-Donald Trump 'swill' played part in ruthless CBS axe
Clay Travis thinks Stephen Colbert's anti-Donald Trump 'swill' played part in ruthless CBS axe

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Clay Travis thinks Stephen Colbert's anti-Donald Trump 'swill' played part in ruthless CBS axe

OutKick founder Clay Travis believes Donald Trump has sped up the decline of late night talkshows, after Stephen Colbert 's program was canceled this week. The 'Late Show' was axed this week and according to reports, was losing up to $40million a year - a figure bosses at CBS ultimately decided was unsustainable for its best-known show. Advertising revenue for Colbert's show has dropped 40% since 2018. Colbert regularly attacked Donald Trump over the airwaves - the President reacted with glee when the news broke Thursday of Colbert's demise - but Travis believes the anti-Trump agenda of multiple late night talkshows is a reason behind their widespread struggles. He wrote on X on Saturday: 'I think the late night comedy shows have been replaced by actual comedy specials — it used to be pretty hard to see comedy sets, now streaming has a billion — & podcasts, which do much better and more authentic interviews with 'famous' people than the five minute late show interviews. 'I'd argue the late night show audience got split and erased by those two alternatives. Having said that, late night shows might have had another decade if they'd stuck to making fun of both sides instead of becoming bastions of anti-Trump swill. 'They thought crushing Trump was their salvation, in reality he accelerated their obsolescence.' The 46-year-old Travis, who launched the sports and opinion website in 2011, posted several thoughtful suggestions over how and why talkshows appear to be struggling for viewers - none more so than on CBS. When 'The Late Late Show' host James Corden left in 2023, CBS opted not to hire a replacement. The network also canceled 'After Midnight' this year, after host Taylor Tomlinson chose to return to full-time stand-up comedy. Travis also scrutinized their efforts to adapt to the demands of the internet age. 'Late night comedy forgot their shows served everyone & decided to pursue Internet niche instead,' he wrote. 'I think lots of big brands have over indexed what 'Twitter' thinks. ESPN, for instance. And it has largely made their brands and product worse. 'Challenge in Internet age is bland content that appeals to everyone doesn't have the hard core fandom depth necessary to succeed there. 'Most 'TV people' don't work on Internet because authenticity is most important trait in Internet era and TV guys and gals often are pretty fake. Interesting thing to me is now TV is just taking Internet people and putting them on TV to try and save itself.' Trump made no effort in hiding his delight at the news of Colbert's show ending. He wrote on Truth Social: 'I absolutely love that Colbert' got fired. 'His talent was even less than his ratings. I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next. Has even less talent than Colbert! 'Greg Gutfeld is better than all of them combined, including the Moron on NBC who ruined the once great Tonight Show.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store