Jeffrey Epstein Files Stall House Rules Committee
Another legislative week in Congress has been thrown into disarray — this time over a bipartisan effort to release the Jeffrey Epstein files. A routine meeting of the GOP-led House Rules Committee was abruptly halted on Monday evening after Democrats attempted to force a vote on the Epstein records.
The committee had originally convened to advance unrelated legislation, but the sudden maneuver by Democrats caused Republicans to recess the meeting indefinitely.
GOP Recoils from Epstein Vote
Republicans on the committee showed no appetite for a public vote on the amendment to release the Jeffrey Epstein files, dismissing it as political theater. Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) accused Democrats of “grandstanding” and confirmed that Republicans had no intention of resuming the meeting.
As a result, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) told reporters that it was “unlikely” the committee would reconvene this week, effectively halting progress on several other key pieces of legislation.
Legislative Fallout: Immigration Bill, ZIP Code Reform on Hold
With the committee frozen, House Republicans will not move forward this week on multiple scheduled votes. Among the shelved legislation: an immigration reform bill and a proposal to establish new ZIP codes.
Instead, the House is expected to vote on just two minor bills under suspension on Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. — a process that requires a two-thirds majority and bypasses the committee bottleneck.
Epstein Vote Tactics Overshadow Agenda
Democrats, seizing on bipartisan momentum around transparency, are using the procedural choke point to highlight the stalled effort to release the Jeffrey Epstein files, which include potential evidence involving high-profile individuals and institutions.
By introducing amendments tied to unrelated legislation, Democrats have effectively made it politically risky for Republicans to continue blocking the motion without appearing to dodge the issue.

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Long Recess Looms, No Resolution in Sight
With the House scheduled to begin its August recess this Thursday, it’s increasingly likely that the legislative logjam will carry into the fall session. While minor bills may still pass under suspension, no major movement is expected on the Epstein files or other pressing items until after the break.
House Republicans are expected to meet behind closed doors Tuesday morning for their weekly conference. Speaker Mike Johnson is also scheduled to address the press following the meeting.
Key Takeaway:
The push to release the Jeffrey Epstein files has exposed deep procedural rifts in Congress, grinding House operations to a halt just days before lawmakers leave for summer recess. Whether transparency or political optics win out remains to be seen — but for now, legislative progress is firmly on pause.