Trump Live Updates: Bill Clinton to Be Deposed in House Epstein Inquiry - The New York Times
2/27/2026, 4:00:52 PM
A new burst of legal and political pressure is converging on the Epstein records and a separate court fight over Trump’s proposed White House ballroom. Headlines signal escalating scrutiny around the Epstein files, including a House inquiry move to depose Bill Clinton and fresh accusations that the Justice Department is withholding Trump-related material. In parallel, multiple outlets report a federal judge has allowed Trump’s $400M White House ballroom project to move forward “for now,” underscoring that the dispute is not fully resolved. Abroad, U.S.-Iran talks are described as yielding no deal, while the White House is reported to be doing damage control on trade deals after a Supreme Court ruling.
A new burst of legal and political pressure is converging on the Epstein records and a separate court fight over Trump’s proposed White House ballroom.
Headlines signal escalating scrutiny around the Epstein files, including a House inquiry move to depose Bill Clinton and fresh accusations that the Justice Department is withholding Trump-related material. In parallel, multiple outlets report a federal judge has allowed Trump’s $400M White House ballroom project to move forward “for now,” underscoring that the dispute is not fully resolved. Abroad, U.S.-Iran talks are described as yielding no deal, while the White House is reported to be doing damage control on trade deals after a Supreme Court ruling.
Key points
- A House Epstein inquiry is set to depose Bill Clinton, according to a Trump live-updates item.
- The Hill spotlights a “big new controversy” over the Epstein files, signaling a renewed dispute over what should be released and how.
- The BBC reports the U.S. Justice Department is accused of withholding Trump-related Epstein files.
- A federal judge has allowed Trump’s White House ballroom project to proceed “for now,” per The Washington Post, NPR, and Fox Business.
- Time reports U.S.-Iran talks produced no deal amid warnings about the risk of a “devastating war.”
- Politico reports the White House is doing damage control on trade deals after a Supreme Court ruling.
Why it matters
- The Epstein-file headlines suggest a widening institutional fight—Congress, the Justice Department, and media scrutiny—over access, disclosure, and accountability.
- The ballroom rulings keep a high-profile Trump-linked project alive while emphasizing legal vulnerability through the repeated qualifier “for now.”
- The foreign-policy and trade headlines point to simultaneous pressure points for the administration: stalled diplomacy with Iran and instability around trade policy after court action.
What to watch
- Whether the House deposition of Bill Clinton proceeds on schedule and how it reshapes the Epstein-file political narrative.
- Any response from the Justice Department to accusations of withholding Trump-related Epstein files, and whether additional documents are sought or released.
- Next court steps in the White House ballroom dispute, given that multiple reports stress the project can continue only “for now.”