Trump: I’ve Been Totally Exonerated

Trump’s Clear Response

President Donald Trump answered reporters Monday with a short, forceful line: I have nothing to hide. He repeated that he has been exonerated and denied any connection to Jeffrey Epstein. Trump reminded the press that he cooperated with law enforcement years ago, that he kicked Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago, and that he was publicly opposed to Epstein long before the recent headlines. He also called out a leftwing author who, according to reporting, encouraged Epstein to target him during the 2016 campaign. The tone was confident and blunt. No apologies. No second-guessing.

What Trump Points To as Proof

Trump referenced records and past actions to make his case. He notes that investigators did not find evidence linking him to Epstein in the way critics hoped. He also pointed to his early cooperation with law enforcement and a 2007 expulsion of Epstein from Mar-a-Lago as factual points that undercut the idea he was involved in Epstein’s crimes. Those are simple, verifiable claims that supporters say matter more than hearsay or old gossip. Whether that satisfies everyone is another question, but it is the core of his public defense.

Clinton’s Defense and Her Claim

Hillary Clinton told the BBC she and Bill Clinton have no substantive ties to Epstein and suggested that attacks on the Clintons are meant to divert attention from President Donald Trump. She admitted Bill Clinton took some plane rides for charitable work and said she does not recall meeting Epstein, though she has acknowledged meeting Ghislaine Maxwell. She also criticized Republicans over oversight tactics and meetings that led to subpoenas. The back-and-forth is now playing out publicly, each side framing the other as the distractor.

Why This Matters Politically

This is a raw political fight with real reputations on the line. Each side accuses the other of playing politics while pointing to documents, timelines, and public statements. For conservatives watching, the focus is on whether investigations and facts are getting fair treatment and whether media outlets are treating both sides equally. For voters, the key question is simple: who is telling the truth and who is trying to shift attention away from uncomfortable facts?

Media Spin and Public Reaction

The media will frame this however it wants, but the public gets to judge the evidence. Trump called Hillary’s comments evidence of what he called Trump Derangement Syndrome and used the line to suggest she is more driven by partisan anger than by facts. Meanwhile, critics of Trump will keep pressing for more documents and clarity. The drama will continue as both camps push their versions into the headlines and demand that investigators and journalists follow the records, not the rumors.

WE’D LOVE TO HEAR YOUR THOUGHTS! PLEASE COMMENT BELOW.

JIMMY

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