Rep. Ro Khanna thinks the Epstein files could help Democrats 'fight Trump effectively'
NBC
CLEVELAND — Rep. Ro Khanna, a California Democrat who has been asserting himself as his party’s leading voice for releasing the Jeffrey Epstein files, brought the noisy national fight to an unlikely audience Friday: a gathering of policy-oriented Democratic mayors.
Khanna acknowledged that it was a departure from his usual emphasis on economics.
“I’m less in the news for the new economic patriotism and more in the news for the Epstein files,” he said in his remarks at a Democratic Mayors Association conference at a skyscraping hotel overlooking Lake Erie. “I’ll tell you why it matters. It matters because before you can ask people to support government initiatives, you need people to trust government.”
Khanna’s appearance here came at the end of a week in which the House broke for summer recess as Democrats repeatedly pushed the Epstein issue. He and Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., joined to co-sponsor a measure that aims to force President Donald Trump’s administration to publish “all unclassified records” on Epstein, the financier and convicted sex offender who died by suicide awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges in 2019. That resolution is expected to come up when Congress returns from recess.
Epstein counted Trump and other powerful people as friends before he was criminally charged, though the president long ago disavowed him. The case has exposed a rift between Trump and key figures in his MAGA movement who for years have demanded more transparency on Epstein and are upset that Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi have not provided it.
“People say, ‘Well, why did you lead this fight on the Epstein files?’ And to me, it’s about trust in government and transparency,” Khanna said in an interview with NBC News. “If you don’t have trust and transparency, how are you going to get Medicare for all? How are you going to get a 21st century Marshall Plan? It’s maybe the kryptonite that gets MAGA to unravel.”
Khanna’s speech was also notable for its narrow focus on Vice President JD Vance, who was previously among the MAGA leaders pushing for the release of the Epstein files. Vance is a likely Republican presidential candidate in 2028, when Trump is term-limited. Khanna, meanwhile, has been open about his interest in seeking the Democratic nomination that year — and conspicuous in his attention on Vance.
“Because I’m in the vice president’s hometown again, I thought I would remind him of some of the things he said,” said Khanna, briefly confusing Cleveland with Vance’s downstate home base in Cincinnati before reading from some of the vice president’s old social media posts about the Epstein case.
Vance, for example, posted as a Senate candidate in December 2021: “If you’re a journalist and you’re not asking questions about this case you should be ashamed of yourself. What purpose do you even serve? I’m sure there’s a middle class teenager somewhere who could use some harassing right now but maybe try to do your job once in a while.”
Khanna shot back Friday: “Maybe you should be doing your job now. You were passionate about this issue when you were asking people in this state for their votes. What happened?”
A spokesperson for the vice president declined to comment Friday on Khanna’s remarks.
Vance has mentioned Epstein sparingly in recent weeks, with the White House tightening its grip over the messaging on what has become a thorny subject. In a post Thursday on X, Vance criticized The Wall Street Journal’s recent coverage of Trump’s relationship with Epstein.
Asked in the interview if he was attempting to position himself as Vance’s strongest Democratic rival in 2028, Khanna did not answer directly. He instead argued that he and Vance have different views about what it means to be an American, pointing to Vance’s recent speech at the conservative Claremont Institute. Vance asserted there that “the modern left seems dedicated … to saying you don’t belong in America unless you agree with progressive liberalism in 2025.”
Vance, Khanna said, is “trying to articulate a more parochial vision of American identity. And I think that he’s a real foil in my conception of American identity.”
Khanna also said he believes an Epstein-centric message helps Democrats — and him.
“I’ve never gotten this kind of Republican support on anything I have done before from the MAGA base,” Khanna said. “There have been a lot of things that the Democrats have screamed our heads off about, but it’s always just the Democrats. Sometimes it’s the Democrats combined with establishment Republicans such as Liz Cheney or Mitt Romney or Paul Ryan.
“But it’s never been the Democrats who are combined with the loudest voices in the MAGA world, and that is, I think, the key to not just fighting Trump, but fighting Trump effectively.”