Success breeds success, just as failure feeds failure. And right now, President Donald Trump’s Republican Party is getting buried by a blizzard of bad news:
- Democrats’ massive wins over the GOP in last week’s elections keep looking worse for the party that owns Washington.
- Republicans stand to lose six seats through redistricting fights after Election Day.
- Just 1 in 3 Americans now approve of Donald Trump’s management of the U.S. government.
- Democrats are enjoying their largest polling lead over Republicans since the massive “blue wave” election of 2018.
But wait. There’s more.
Yesterday’s explosive news surrounding the Epstein emails created a five-alarm political fire that Team Trump has spent the past 24 hours desperately trying to put out.
In a preposterously inappropriate move, Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel reportedly lobbied Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., to remove her name from the discharge petition that would force a vote on releasing the Epstein files. Boebert was unmoved.
In a sign of Trump’s waning strength on all things Jeffrey Epstein, South Carolina’s Rep. Nancy Mace also rejected White House overtures to strike her signature from the petition, saying releasing the Epstein documents was personal to her.
With a flood of Epstein emails going public, Politico’s Kyle Cheney and Nahal Toosi report that Epstein offered to act as a conduit between the Russians and Donald Trump.
The Atlantic’s Mark Leibovich details how D.C. Republicans are increasingly viewing the president as a lame-duck president whose power is in decline. I interview Mark below.
And, in a “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” debut, Mika writes about the swearing-in of Adelita Grijalva to the People’s House yesterday in an extraordinarily moving moment.
Enjoy ☕️
“It’s time for Congress to act as a check and balance on this administration. That’s why I’ll sign the Epstein petition now. Justice can’t wait.”
FEAR OF FILES FLUMMOXES GOP
The one story the White House wants Washington to ignore is the one story Americans can’t get enough of.
And yesterday, Trump’s team took a bad situation surrounding the Epstein files and made it worse. Republicans on both sides of Pennsylvania Ave. kept stumbling over themselves in ways that guaranteed even more breathless press coverage.
As the two top Justice Department officials tried — and failed — to pressure Boebert to remove her name from the Epstein discharge petition, the GOP erred again: The Republican-led House Oversight Committee released more than 20,000 documents, apparently hoping to distract from the smaller batch of damning materials Democrats made public hours before.
Instead of overwhelming reporters with documents, the GOP’s move only fanned the political flames.
Because of the GOP’s collective panic attack, Democrats in Congress and reporters across Washington now have weeks of new material to dig through — all tied to the one story Donald Trump most wants to keep out of the headlines.
And now begins the countdown to the U.S. House voting on releasing the Epstein files. Imagine the stories and subplots that process will create.
The drama will then move to the other side of the Capitol complex in the Senate chamber. For those lazily suggesting the bill will be dead on arrival there, ask yourself why the White House is fighting so hard to kill it before it even gets a vote in the House.
Think about how tough it will be for any Republican senator to vote against full transparency in a case involving the most notorious pedophile of this century — especially when that’s what the MAGA base wants most.
ADELITA GRIJALVA ENTERS STAGE LEFT
A guest essay by Mika Brzezinski
“Gracias,” she said, greeted by applause in the House chamber.
“I stand as the proud granddaughter of a bracero — a hardworking Mexican immigrant who came here for a better life — and as the daughter of a U.S. congressman.”
At 55, this mother of three is now the Democratic face fighting for health care and against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and pressing for justice in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal — delayed 50 days by the Republican speaker. For Democrats looking for hope, Adelita Grijalva’s floor speech delivered.
“From bracero to Congress in one generation — that’s the promise of America, and the country I want for my children.”
Finally celebrating her landslide win to fill her late father’s seat, Grijalva spoke in both English and Spanish, marking her milestone as the first Latina and first Chicana from Arizona in Congress.
She wasted no time in addressing the moment’s challenge:
“The real concern is not just what this administration has done, but what the majority in this body has failed to do — hold Trump accountable as a coequal branch of government.”
Her delayed swearing-in made her the decisive 218th vote to force action on releasing the Epstein files.









