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Three of The Four Republicans Who Voted to Release The Epstein Files Won’t Be in the House in 2027
In 2025, four House Republicans broke ranks to vote in favor of releasing the files relating to disgraced financier and sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein. Three of them will not be returning in 2027.
While running for a second term, many of President Donald Trump’s surrogates on the campaign trail said that if elected, he would release the complete files on Epstein. Even though Trump himself was more cool on the idea—he’d called the files a “Democrat hoax that never ends“—his supporters were so outspoken about it that it became a de facto plank of his platform.
Throughout 2025, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) delayed the vote as long as he could. Representatives organized a discharge petition to force the vote, and Johnson even delayed swearing in Rep. Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ) for two months, as she promised to be the final signature needed. But in November, the House finally voted. All Democrats voted to release the Epstein files, but four Republicans—just enough to get it to pass—crossed party lines to vote in favor.
READ MORE: Marjorie Taylor Greene Says She’s ‘Done Supporting’ The GOP: ‘Party Betrays Its Voters’
Those congresspeople, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Nancy Mace of South Carolina, Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Lauren Boebert of Colorado, had previously been staunch allies of Trump, and among the most conservative members of the House. However, after their vote, Trump and the MAGA movement turned on them.
Greene was the first to leave. She announced she’d be resigning a week after the Epstein vote, saying she didn’t want to put her family and constituents through “a hurtful and hateful primary against me by the president that we all fought for.” She resigned on January 5, the five-year anniversary of her first swearing in.
Massie was the next to fall. His primary was May 19, and he came in second to the Trump-backed Ed Gallrein, a former Navy SEAL. The election was hard-fought, with the candidates and their supporters spending the most money on advertising in a House race ever, according to NBC News. Massie lost by nearly 10 percentage points and a little more than 10,000 votes. After his loss, Trump said, “He was a bad guy. He deserves to lose.”
Though a Trump loyalist like Massie, Mace also positioned herself as the face of anti-LGBTQ activism. She railed against Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE), the first openly trans member of Congress. Mace introduced a bill barring trans women from using the women’s restrooms, telling reporters the legislation was directed at McBride specifically. Mace ended up coming in fifth in her primary on June 9, earning just 12.1% of the vote. The top two vote-getters faced off June 23 in a primary, with the state Attorney General Alan Wilson triumphing over the Trump-backed Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette.
Massie and Mace are lame ducks—and the question remains, will Boebert join them? Boebert’s primary is June 30—and given that her district is the reddest in Colorado, it is nearly a foregone conclusion that the primary winner will ultimately land in Washington. That said, despite Trump calling for someone to run against her, he did so too late for anyone to file, and Boebert is running for her party’s nomination unopposed. So barring an unprecedented upset—she’s currently polling at 80% over her Democratic rival Eileen Laubacher—Boebert will be the last one standing.
Image via Shutterstock
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