In a divided Washington where bipartisanship feels like a relic, a fierce Republican libertarian and a progressive Democrat—Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna—stand united, drafting resolutions to hold Attorney General Pam Bondi in contempt for defying Congress’s demand for full transparency.
Republican Thomas Massie teams up with Democrat Ro Khanna to demand unredacted Epstein documents from Pam Bondi—asking why the DOJ deliberately missed the transparency deadline and protected elites instead of victims. After the Epstein Files Transparency Act they co-sponsored mandated complete release by December 19, the Justice Department’s partial, heavily redacted dump—missing key records and shielding non-victim names—has survivors furious and lawmakers accusing the agency of prioritizing powerful networks over long-delayed justice.
As Massie and Khanna rally cross-party support for daily fines against Bondi until every page emerges, the pressure mounts: Will this rare alliance finally pry open the doors guarding decades of secrets?

In a divided Washington where bipartisanship feels like a relic, a fierce Republican libertarian and a progressive Democrat—Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna—stand united, drafting resolutions to hold Attorney General Pam Bondi in contempt for defying Congress’s demand for full transparency.
Republican Thomas Massie teams up with Democrat Ro Khanna to demand unredacted Epstein documents from Pam Bondi—asking why the DOJ deliberately missed the transparency deadline and protected elites instead of victims. After the Epstein Files Transparency Act they co-sponsored mandated complete release by December 19, the Justice Department’s partial, heavily redacted dump—missing key records and shielding non-victim names—has survivors furious and lawmakers accusing the agency of prioritizing powerful networks over long-delayed justice.
The Epstein Files Transparency Act (H.R. 4405), signed into law by President Trump on November 19, 2025, required the DOJ to release all unclassified records related to Jeffrey Epstein’s investigations, prosecutions, flight logs, and associates in a searchable format by December 19. Instead, the initial release was incomplete: thousands of pages with excessive redactions, entire sections blacked out, and some documents temporarily removed (including one featuring Trump) before partial reinstatement.
Massie (R-KY) and Khanna (D-CA), who forced the bill’s passage via a discharge petition, appeared jointly on CBS’s Face the Nation decrying the rollout. “The quickest way to get justice for these victims is to bring inherent contempt against Pam Bondi,” Massie stated, revealing they are drafting a resolution for daily personal fines on the Attorney General until full compliance. Khanna added they are building a bipartisan coalition, emphasizing that inherent contempt requires only House approval—no Senate or courts needed—and called the partial release “a slap in the face of survivors.”
The DOJ defended the delays, citing victim privacy protections and the discovery of over a million additional pages needing review. Deputy AG Todd Blanche promised rolling releases, but critics, including Senate Democrats like Chuck Schumer, labeled it a “blatant cover-up.” Some files were briefly pulled due to victim concerns, fueling accusations of selective transparency.
Survivors expressed deep frustration. The redactions often shielded non-victims, while key evidence about Epstein’s enablers remained hidden. Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl, published in October 2025 after her April suicide at age 41, amplified calls for truth. Giuffre’s raw accounts of grooming, trafficking, and elite impunity underscored the human cost of delays—victims waiting decades while powerful networks evaded scrutiny.
This Massie-Khanna alliance transcends ideology: a libertarian distrustful of government overreach and a progressive championing accountability united against institutional stonewalling. Their push echoes broader demands amid renewed #MeToo scrutiny and Epstein revelations.
As Massie and Khanna rally cross-party support for daily fines against Bondi until every page emerges, the pressure mounts: Will this rare alliance finally pry open the doors guarding decades of secrets? In an era craving transparency, the incomplete release tests faith in justice—proving that even under a mandate, some shadows linger, but bipartisan resolve may yet force the light.
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