
The Political Machine Cheers While the Epstein Questions Remain (5/27/26)
27/5/2026
0:00
16:36
The column argues that Thomas Massie’s primary defeat is not just a political loss but the symbolic collapse of what it calls the “Epstein Era,” meaning the period when Epstein-related transparency demands, online speculation, anti-establishment anger, and accusations about hidden networks became central to parts of Republican politics. Its basic claim is that Massie helped drag the party into a conspiracy swamp by pushing the Epstein Files Transparency Act with Ro Khanna, amplifying suspicion around sealed records, and giving oxygen to claims the writer treats as paranoia rather than legitimate oversight. The column frames Massie’s loss to Trump-backed Ed Gallrein as voters finally rejecting that politics of suspicion, and it lumps Massie together with figures like Marjorie Taylor Greene and Tucker Carlson as people who allegedly used Epstein to fuel distrust, grievance, and ideological chaos.
But taken skeptically, the whole argument feels very convenient. Calling Massie’s defeat the “end” of the Epstein era is a huge stretch, because Epstein did not become a major public issue because of Thomas Massie; he became one because of a real federal sweetheart deal, real victims, real institutional failures, real sealed records, real elite associations, and years of DOJ opacity. The column tries to convert a transparency fight into a conspiracy problem, which is a neat little rhetorical trick: once demands for records are branded as fever-swamp politics, the people asking for documents become the story instead of the documents themselves. Massie’s bill passed the House 427–1, which makes it hard to pretend this was some fringe personal crusade rather than a politically explosive transparency issue with overwhelming bipartisan support. His defeat may show Trump’s power inside a GOP primary, but it does not prove the Epstein questions are over, and it sure as hell does not erase the underlying reason people still want the files: the official story has never earned the level of trust its defenders keep demanding.
to contact me:
[email protected]
source:
Thomas Massie's defeat brings the Epstein Era to a humiliating end
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
But taken skeptically, the whole argument feels very convenient. Calling Massie’s defeat the “end” of the Epstein era is a huge stretch, because Epstein did not become a major public issue because of Thomas Massie; he became one because of a real federal sweetheart deal, real victims, real institutional failures, real sealed records, real elite associations, and years of DOJ opacity. The column tries to convert a transparency fight into a conspiracy problem, which is a neat little rhetorical trick: once demands for records are branded as fever-swamp politics, the people asking for documents become the story instead of the documents themselves. Massie’s bill passed the House 427–1, which makes it hard to pretend this was some fringe personal crusade rather than a politically explosive transparency issue with overwhelming bipartisan support. His defeat may show Trump’s power inside a GOP primary, but it does not prove the Epstein questions are over, and it sure as hell does not erase the underlying reason people still want the files: the official story has never earned the level of trust its defenders keep demanding.
to contact me:
[email protected]
source:
Thomas Massie's defeat brings the Epstein Era to a humiliating end
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
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