Bill Clinton has detonated a political time bomb. Under oath, he claims Donald Trump privately expressed regret over a “falling out” with Jeffrey Epstein — not because Epstein was a monster, but because of a real estate deal. That version clashes violently with Trump’s years of “creep” denials. Lawmakers are split, cameras are rolling, and the truth about their past is sudde… Continues…
Clinton’s sworn account slices straight into the heart of Trump’s carefully crafted narrative. For years, Trump and his allies insisted he heroically cut Epstein off over “creepy” behavior and stolen young women from Mar-a-Lago. Clinton instead describes a rueful Trump at a charity golf event, lamenting that they “had some great times” and only fell out over a property bidding war, then walking away with a simple, “I’m sorry it happened.”
That quiet, almost casual remark now echoes loudly through Washington. It suggests not moral revulsion, but bruised egos and business rivalry ended the friendship. Republicans seize on Clinton’s cooperation to shield Trump; Democrats argue the contradiction demands deeper investigation. Between old photos, glowing quotes, and this new testimony, the story of Trump and Epstein looks less like a clean break and more like a relationship only abandoned when it stopped being useful.
