House Democrats Vow to Subpoena Melania Trump in Epstein Probe, Citing Clinton Depositions as ‘New Precedent’
In a significant escalation of the political battle over the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, House Democrats have signaled that if they retake the majority in November, their first act will be to compel testimony from an unprecedented witness: First Lady Melania Trump.
The threat, led by Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), comes on the heels of back-to-back depositions of former President Bill Clinton and former First Lady Hillary Clinton by the Republican-controlled House Oversight Committee. Democrats argue that by forcing a former First Lady to answer questions about her husband’s associations, Republicans have “set a new precedent” that must now be applied equally to the current residents of the White House.
“We now want President Trump to come in and to testify under oath in front of the Oversight Committee. We want the first lady, who we know had a relationship as well with Jeffrey Epstein, to come in under oath and testify,” Garcia told CNN’s CNN News Central on Friday. “That is the new precedent that Republicans are going to want to set here.”
The ‘Clinton Precedent’ and the Push for Reciprocity
The strategy hinges on the concept of political symmetry. Hillary Clinton underwent roughly six hours of closed-door questioning on Thursday regarding the disgraced financier—a session she did not request, but one that Democrats now view as a gift for future oversight.
Garcia argued that if it is relevant for the committee to question a former First Lady about Epstein—despite no evidence in released files suggesting Hillary Clinton had a direct relationship with him—it is exponentially more relevant to question Melania Trump, whose contacts with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell are documented in photos and emails from the early 2000s.
During the hearing for Bill Clinton on Friday, the focus remained on the former president’s connections. However, for Democrats, the key takeaway was the mechanism. “The Republicans have now established that first ladies are witnesses,” a senior Democratic aide told reporters. “You cannot have a system where only Democratic first ladies are subject to congressional oversight. That is not how the law works.”
What the Files Say About Melania Trump
While President Trump’s long social history with Epstein—including flights on his private jet in the 1990s and a documented friendship that lasted over a decade—has been widely reported , the recent document dumps have cast a new spotlight on the current First Lady.
According to documents reviewed in the Epstein files released by the Department of Justice, Melania Trump (then Melania Knauss) moved in the same social circles as Epstein and Maxwell in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
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Photographic Evidence: A photo from February 12, 2000, shows Melania partying with Trump, Epstein, and Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago.
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Direct Communication: Italian-language publication La Voce di New York reports that files include an email from 2002 signed “With love, Melania,” to which Maxwell responded in a confidential tone. Other records reportedly document contacts between Melania and Maxwell in 2002, roughly three years before she married Donald Trump.
The Political Calculus
Despite the heated rhetoric, the likelihood of Melania Trump testifying in the immediate future is slim. Currently, Republicans hold the majority in the House. Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) has shown little interest in broadening the probe to include the current president, focusing instead on the Clinton era.
However, the political winds could shift. If Democrats flip the narrow Republican majority in the 2026 midterms, Garcia has promised that anyone with a connection to Epstein will be subpoenaed “on day one.”
This prospect has ignited a fierce debate on Capitol Hill. Republican Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) pushed back against the idea, arguing that dragging a sitting First Lady before Congress would be a step too far and a distraction.
Conversely, legal experts suggest that the Clinton depositions have created a dangerous precedent for the executive branch. “Having them forced to testify now sets a dangerous precedent for the future that is going to put Trump in jeopardy,” said Dr. David Andersen, an associate professor of U.S. politics at Durham University. “If and when Democrats recapture the House, they will certainly use this as a precedent to compel Trump, Melania, and the rest of the Trump family to testify.”
The White House Response
Thus far, the First Lady’s office has remained silent on the matter. Melania Trump has avoided commenting on the Epstein investigation; during a recent White House event, she deflected a question regarding Maxwell’s prison transfer, redirecting attention to the official initiative at hand.
For now, the ball remains in the court of the voters. The November election will determine whether the “Clinton precedent” becomes a tool for Democratic oversight—or merely a footnote in a long history of political brinkmanship.