In a stunning political rupture, Donald Trump has abruptly withdrawn his support for one of his closest allies, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, after she publicly demanded the release of the long-awaited Epstein files.
Apologies for multiple emails on a Friday night, but this is a major development and a sign of a growing rift in the America First circles. This White House is in a panic mode, and now more than ever, we need to hold their feet to the fire to get the truth. Trump wants to distract the American public away from his own associations. I will not let that happen. Subscribe to support my work as I continue reporting what the White House does not want you to hear.
Subscribe
The rift marks one of the most dramatic breaks yet within Trump’s inner circle and has ignited a broader public feud over transparency, justice for victims, and the political weaponization of the Epstein case.

The clash comes as billionaire Reid Hoffman, whom Trump has repeatedly called to be investigated over alleged ties to Jeffrey Epstein, is himself demanding full disclosure of every document and every name contained in the Epstein files.
“Trump should release all of the Epstein files: every person and every document in the files,” Hoffman posted, insisting that transparency is both a moral necessity and a repudiation of what he called “baseless investigations” against him.

In a rapid series of statements, Hoffman doubled down on his call for complete public release:

“I refuse to bend the knee to Donald Trump and his slanderous lies,” Hoffman wrote.
As pressure mounted, Trump was confronted by reporters tonight and reacted with visible agitation.
When asked about Reid Hoffman’s claim that Epstein “said you knew about the girls,” Trump dismissed it outright:
“I know nothing about that,” he said, redirecting attention to Epstein’s associations with Bill Clinton, Larry Summers, and JPMorgan Chase, while insisting he and Epstein had a “very bad relationship for many years.”
Pressed further about why the files have not been released, Trump cut off a reporter sharply:
“QUIET! QUIET!”
Another reporter asked whether Trump would rule out a pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime associate convicted for trafficking minors.
Trump responded ambiguously:
“I haven’t even thought about it… I don’t rule it in or out.”
The refusal to close the door on a pardon only intensified scrutiny around Trump’s stance on the broader Epstein scandal.
The collision of Trump’s distancing from Marjorie Taylor Greene, Hoffman’s aggressive challenge, and renewed questions about the Epstein files has created one of the most volatile and politically explosive moments of the year.
At its core lies a simple question that neither Trump nor his allies have answered:
If there is nothing incriminating in the Epstein files, why not release them?
With both political factions now publicly challenging each other, the pressure for transparency, and accountability, is rapidly escalating. The fight over the files is no longer a fringe topic. It has become a defining test of credibility, justice, and political integrity on the national stage.
