When Democrat Adelita Grijalva cruised to a landslide victory in September, winning her congressional special election by roughly 40 points, it was widely assumed that she would soon be sworn in as Arizona’s first Latina congresswoman. That didn’t happen.
In fact, for the last seven weeks, the congresswoman-elect pleaded with House Speaker Mike Johnson and the chamber’s Republican leadership to let her get to work. But they refused, pointing to dubious claims regarding the government shutdown.
As the shutdown nears its end, and with GOP leaders out of excuses, the wait is finally over: On Wednesday afternoon, Grijalva took the oath of office, becoming Congress’ newest member. The House now has a 219-member Republican majority, working alongside a 214-member Democratic minority.
For Grijalva — who succeeds her father, the late Democratic Rep. Raúl Grijalva — it’s a breakthrough moment and a career milestone. But for the rest of the political world, there’s a related element to the congresswoman’s swearing-in that’s of great interest.
There’s a pending discharge petition to force disclosure of the Jeffrey Epstein files, currently being held back by Donald Trump’s Justice Department. As Wednesday got underway, proponents of the effort were one member short of the 218 signatures needed to trigger a vote.
Now, Grijalva has joined the signatories and achieved the long-sought threshold.
A complex legislative process is now poised to unfold, starting with a waiting period of seven legislative days. Soon after, the House will, at long last, hold a floor vote on the bipartisan resolution on the Epstein files, which will be expected to pass.
Only four House GOP members — Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Nancy Mace of South Carolina — joined with Democrats in support of the discharge petition. With this in mind, The New York Times reported earlier Wednesday:








