Former President Bill Clinton sat for a closed-door deposition with the Republican-led House Oversight Committee on February 27, 2026, telling lawmakers he “saw nothing” and “did nothing wrong” when asked about his past ties to Jeffrey Epstein. His prepared opening statement insisted he had no inkling of Epstein’s crimes and that he would have reported him if he had known.
The deposition came a day after former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testified, following subpoenas that forced both Clintons to answer questions about their connections to Epstein and his network. The committee has been digging into documented flights, visits, and other contacts, and while the sessions were not public, the committee said video and transcripts are expected to be released in the coming days.
Republicans on the committee, led by Chairman James Comer, said they expanded their questions for Bill Clinton after reviewing Hillary Clinton’s testimony and related documents, signaling this session could be even more consequential. The focus remains on the extent of the Clintons’ relationship with Epstein, including previously reported flights and interactions that have left Americans wondering how much was known and when.
For patriotic conservatives, Clinton’s perfunctory denials won’t wash — especially given the pattern of evasions and convenient memory lapses we’ve watched from the political left for decades. Nobody here is calling names or rushing to criminal accusations without proof, but hardworking Americans deserve straight answers, not well-rehearsed lines and theatrical indignation from a political dynasty. The Clintons must either clear the air completely or face the political consequences of a credibility gap that won’t be papered over by headlines.
Meanwhile, the mainstream media’s reflex to treat Clinton family denials as closing arguments exposes a double standard that fuels anger across the country. If this were any other powerful family, the press would demand instant transparency, but when Clinton power is on the line, the narrative too often softens and looks for excuses rather than tough follow-up questions.
Congressional oversight exists to get those answers, and conservatives should keep the pressure on until the public can see the record for themselves. Release the video, release the transcript, and let the American people judge whether the Clintons’ explanations hold up under light — justice and truth are not partisan trophies, they are basic obligations to the republic.

