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Former First Lady defies closed-door deposition, challenging Republicans to a televised hearing to clear the Clinton name once and for all.
Hillary Clinton has thrown down the gauntlet to House Republicans, demanding that her testimony regarding Jeffrey Epstein be broadcast live to the world, refusing to hide behind closed doors.
This high-stakes gamble is a calculated maneuver to seize the narrative. By calling for "cameras on," the Clintons are betting that total transparency will neutralize GOP attacks, turning a potential interrogation into a public vindication on the global stage. It is a classic Clinton power play: when cornered, go on the offensive. [...](asc_slot://start-slot-17)The former Secretary of State took to social media to challenge House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer directly: "You love to talk about transparency. There's nothing more transparent than a public hearing, cameras on."
The standoff comes as both Bill and Hillary Clinton are scheduled to testify later this month—Hillary on February 26 and Bill on February 27. The Republicans have been pushing for private, closed-door depositions, a format that allows them to control the release of information and potentially selectively leak damaging snippets. Hillary’s demand for a live broadcast blows that strategy out of the water.
She argues that the American public deserves to see the unedited truth, unfiltered by partisan spin. "Let's stop the games and do this the right way," Bill Clinton added, reinforcing the united front. The investigation into the Clintons' ties to the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein has been a long-running political football, with Republicans eager to find a smoking gun and Democrats dismissing it as a witch hunt.
For Chairman Comer, this request is a trap. If he refuses a public hearing, he looks like he has something to hide. If he agrees, he risks giving Hillary Clinton—a seasoned debater and political operator—a prime-time platform to dismantle the committee’s case live on television.
As Washington holds its breath, the question is no longer if the Clintons will talk, but whether the world will be allowed to watch. Hillary has placed her bet; now the House Republicans must decide if they are ready to show their hand.
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