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Clinton Depositions

  • Mar 3
  • 2 min read

Updated: Mar 18


The House Oversight Committee just dropped full video depositions of Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton from late February 2026, part of their ongoing probe into Jeffrey Epstein's network and how the government handled (or mishandled) it.


For those who've been following the Epstein saga for years, this feels like the never ending nothing burger. And he we are in 2026, still circling the same drain.


What Actually Happened

Hillary went first on February 26 (about 4.5 hours), Bill followed on February 27 (similar length). Both fought the subpoenas hard at first Republicans even threatened contempt of Congress charges before they showed up for closed door questioning in Chappaqua. The videos hit the internet March 2, totaling around nine hours of testimony.


Key takeaways from reporting across outlets:


  • Hillary Clinton insisted she has no recollection of ever meeting Epstein personally. She said she barely knew Ghislaine Maxwell (only brief encounters) and had zero knowledge of any criminal activity before Epstein's 2008 plea deal. Her session reportedly got heated—she raised her voice at Republican questioners, accused the whole thing of being a political stunt, and at one point nearly walked out after a photo from the deposition was leaked (allegedly by Rep. Lauren Boebert to a conservative influencer, breaking House rules).


  • Bill Clinton acknowledged more contact. He flew on Epstein's plane multiple times (for Clinton Foundation related travel, he says), met him socially in the 1990s/early 2000s, but claimed he cut ties long before Epstein's crimes became public knowledge. He repeatedly said he saw nothing inappropriate, no abuse, and would have reported it if he had any inkling. He also dropped a line about Donald Trump telling him (years ago, on a golf course) that Trump and Epstein had a falling out over a real estate deal.


Both denied any wrongdoing, any awareness of Epstein's trafficking, and any involvement themselves. No new bombshells appear to have emerged no smoking gun documents, no surprise admissions—just a lot of "I don't recall" and pointed fingers at the process itself.


The Millennial Frustration Angle

Look, if you're in your 30s or 40s like a lot of this blog's readers, you've grown up watching the Clintons be the ultimate political boomer lightning rod. Whitewater, Lewinsky, emails, Benghazi, now Epstein adjacent depositions decades later—it's exhausting. The right keeps dragging them back into the spotlight for old associations; the left defends them as targets of endless witch hunts.


Meanwhile, Epstein's victims get justice delayed (or denied), the powerful skate on technicalities, and the rest of us are left doom scrolling nine hour deposition videos instead of, I don't know, getting any answers.


This is how broken our politics feels when we're still litigating 20–30 year old social circles in 2026 while everything else burns. The Oversight Committee calls it accountability; critics call it theater. Either way, it changes nothing for the average person grinding through inflation, student debt, and a news cycle that never lets the past die.


The videos are out there if you want to torture yourself. But honestly? Most of us already know the script. The powerful protect their own, the partisan hacks score points, and frustration just keeps building.

What do you think? Political theater, overdue scrutiny, or both?


Stay Frustrated

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