
Jeffrey Epstein Lobby's Bill Clinton On Behalf Of Les Wexner
25/01/2026
0:00
12:39
Jeffrey Epstein repeatedly leveraged his access to Bill Clinton during the late 1990s to act as an unofficial, shadow lobbyist for Les Wexner, pressing for changes to U.S. trade policy that would directly benefit Wexner’s retail empire. Epstein used his proximity to Clinton—cultivated through donor circles, private meetings, and international trips—to raise concerns about tariffs, import restrictions, and manufacturing rules affecting apparel companies reliant on overseas production. According to reporting and later disclosures, Epstein framed these efforts as economic modernization and competitiveness, but in practice they aligned neatly with Wexner’s business interests, particularly his dependence on low-cost foreign manufacturing and favorable customs treatment. Epstein had no formal government role, no lobbying registration, and no legitimate policy portfolio—yet he inserted himself into trade discussions by exploiting access most people never had.
What makes this episode especially damning is how nakedly it illustrates Epstein’s real utility to powerful people: he was a fixer who trafficked access, not ideas. Epstein wasn’t lobbying out of ideological conviction; he was repaying Wexner, the man who financed his rise, by quietly pushing the levers of power on his behalf. Clinton did not publicly acknowledge Epstein as a lobbyist, and Epstein’s role was never disclosed in the way legitimate influence efforts are supposed to be, allowing the entire maneuver to happen in the shadows. This wasn’t Epstein freelancing—it was influence laundering, where wealth bought proximity, proximity bought access, and access was used to advance private corporate interests without accountability. Long before Epstein became a household name for his crimes, he was already operating in the murkiest overlap between money, politics, and untraceable influence.
to contact me:
[email protected]
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
What makes this episode especially damning is how nakedly it illustrates Epstein’s real utility to powerful people: he was a fixer who trafficked access, not ideas. Epstein wasn’t lobbying out of ideological conviction; he was repaying Wexner, the man who financed his rise, by quietly pushing the levers of power on his behalf. Clinton did not publicly acknowledge Epstein as a lobbyist, and Epstein’s role was never disclosed in the way legitimate influence efforts are supposed to be, allowing the entire maneuver to happen in the shadows. This wasn’t Epstein freelancing—it was influence laundering, where wealth bought proximity, proximity bought access, and access was used to advance private corporate interests without accountability. Long before Epstein became a household name for his crimes, he was already operating in the murkiest overlap between money, politics, and untraceable influence.
to contact me:
[email protected]
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
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