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Trump tries to move on amid Epstein files backlash as speaker calls for their release – US politics live | Trump administration

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Donald Trump dismisses inquiry into Jeffrey Epstein as ‘boring’

Oliver Holmes

Oliver Holmes

Donald Trump has dismissed a secretive inquiry into the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein as “boring” and of interest only to “bad people”, but said he backed the release of any “credible” files, as he sought to stamp out a conspiracy-fuelled uproar among his supporters.

The US president is facing a political crisis within his usually loyal Republican “Make America great again” (Maga) base over suspicion that the administration is hiding details of Epstein’s crimes to protect the rich elite he associated with, which included Trump.

One of the most dramatic theories circulating among supporters is that Epstein – who killed himself in 2019 while in federal custody – was murdered by powerful figures to cover up their roles in his sex crimes against children.

“I don’t understand why the Jeffrey Epstein case would be of interest to anybody,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday night when asked why his supporters are so interested in the case. “It’s pretty boring stuff. It’s sordid, but it’s boring, and I don’t understand why it keeps going.

“I think really only pretty bad people, including fake news, want to keep something like that going,” he added. “But credible information, let them give it. Anything that is credible, I would say, let them have it.”

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Key events

Rachel Leingang

Rachel Leingang

As Democrats reckon with a deep inter-party divide that threatens their ability to repair the party’s image and win back voters, Ken Martin said he was not focused on “internal bullshit” because “most people could care less about the internal drama and soap opera of the Democratic party”.

Martin, the chair of the Democratic National Committee, told the Guardian that he knows Democrats have to earn back trust from communities across the country before the midterms.

But, as part of his job leading the party, he has to manage dissenting voices who are trying to chart a way forward for the Democrats after the bruising 2024 loss to Donald Trump. So far, the left is unified in its opposition to Trump – but not on their vision for their own party.

Trump’s spending plan will serve as the uniting force behind the Democratic party’s push toward the midterms. To that end, the DNC launched an effort to organize at events such as book clubs and county fairs to ring the alarm about Trump’s so-called “big, beautiful bill” and tell voters what Democrats stand for, well ahead of the next elections.

Dubbed “organizing summer”, the party is engaging volunteers well before the midterms for on-the-ground meetups with voters. It has sent more money to local and state parties to use in key 2025-26 battlegrounds and is recruiting new leaders in these areas. The party will also restart its partisan voter registration programs, which have been done by third-party nonpartisan groups in recent years.

Martin said one reason voters have lost trust is because the party has only been showing up in the months before an election to ask for a vote, Martin said. Democrats have to put in the work and the face time to re-earn that trust.

“The first conversation that you should have with voters is just listening to them and hearing their hopes and aspirations, and eventually building a relationship of trust around shared values,” he said. “One of the ways we re-earn it is by actually showing them that we give a damn about their community, about their family, being present and having conversations when it’s not a transaction, where we’re asking them to do something for me.”

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