Facing the biggest Republican rebellion of his second term, President Donald Trump reversed course Sunday night and told House Republicans to vote for releasing the Jeffrey Epstein files — a capitulation that one White House aide described as abandoning a “losing battle” to kill legislation his own party was planning to defy him on.
In public, it was a surprising reversal. In private, Trump aides and allies were preparing for a loss, hoping the president would stay quiet. Ultimately, the president accepted the writing on the wall.
Trump’s natural instinct is to fight. But on the potential release of the Epstein files, he’s taken on “too defensive of a posture,” said a person close to the White House granted anonymity to discuss internal thinking. That, they said, “undercuts a lot of his good instincts.”
“The White House made an overall political calculation of does it hurt us more to continue to object it or do we just say, ‘f— it’ and let them vote for it,” said the person close to the White House.
For days, the White House had fought to stop House Republicans from supporting the discharge petition that would bring forward legislation to force Trump’s Department of Justice to release the Epstein files. Trump and his administration’s top law enforcement officials personally tried to convince several House members to withdraw their support for the file release. That effort failed — but still the White House fought the measure.
On Saturday, two White House officials told MS NOW there wasn’t a realistic possibility that Trump would sign legislation releasing the Epstein files. Less than 48 hours later, Trump called on House members to support the effort. “We have nothing to hide,” he wrote in a social media post.
That course correction was finalized on his Sunday evening flight from Florida to Washington, D.C., said a White House official granted anonymity to speak candidly about internal strategy.
Moments after the president’s post went out, the official said, top White House aides sent talking points to a handful of group chats between White House staffers and MAGA social media influencers. The ask: Make it clear that Trump wants Republicans to vote “YES” on the release of the Epstein files.
“That only happens when there’s a specific thing the [White House] is trying to make a coordinated push about,” the official said.
On Monday afternoon, Trump publicly agreed to sign the legislation to force his own administration to release the files. “Sure, I would,” he said in the Oval Office.”
“President Trump has been consistently calling for transparency related to the Epstein files for years,” White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson claimed when asked to explain the change. “The Trump administration has done more for the victims than Democrats ever have.”









