Bill Clinton Refuses To Honor Congression
Bill and Hillary Clinton just crossed a line.
Subpoenaed, warned, rescheduled — and they still refused to show.
Not once, but repeatedly. Now Congress is done playing nice.
Chairman James Comer is moving toward contempt, and the stakes are no longer symbolic.
This isn’t just about Epstein.
The Clintons’ refusal to appear under oath in the Epstein probe is more than a scheduling dispute; it’s a calculated political stand.
By branding themselves as victims of “tyrannical government,” they’re trying to turn a basic accountability question into a grand struggle for democracy itself.
That framing may energize loyalists, but it sidesteps the core issue:
why won’t they simply testify if they truly have nothing to hide?
Comer’s move to hold Bill Clinton in contempt of Congress is a direct challenge to decades of Clinton exceptionalism.
A bipartisan committee voted for these subpoenas, and ignoring them
shreds the idea that powerful political families must play by the same rules as everyone else.
Whether Hillary follows her husband’s lead will determine if this becomes a full-scale constitutional confrontation.
One way or another, this fight will clarify who still believes subpoenas matter—and who believes they’re above them.