U.S. President Donald Trump attends a ceremony marking the 24th anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States at the Pentagon, in Washington D.C., U.S., September 11, 2025. REUTERS Evelyn Hockstein
A prominent House Republican who successfully advanced bipartisan legislation to release the Epstein files is predicting there will be more GOP "defections" once the primaries are over.
U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) told Politico that because Speaker Mike Johnson's majority is so thin, "on any given day, I would just need one or two of my own co-conspirators to get something done" that goes against the Trump administration's agenda.
He said that "what’s happening is that the retirement caucus is growing and primary days are coming up and passing. Once we get past March, April and May, which contain a large portion of their Republican primaries, I think you’re going to see more defections."
Massie added that "quietly and privately, people are telling me they agree with me."
In a surprising revelation, Massie said that House Republicans "are being told every week to stand down, bite their tongue, sit on their hands, do what they’re told, be part of the team and put their brain in neutral."
Massie also offered several other pointed remarks.
He noted that after President Trump called him a "moron" at the National Prayer Breakfast earlier this month, pastors were "not impressed and I don’t think anybody was impressed by his performance at the prayer breakfast. It was completely political."
The Kentucky Republican further directed strong criticism toward Attorney General Pam Bondi after being the only member of his party to, as Politico reported, "spar" with her at last week's contentious congressional hearing.
"When the attorney general is reduced to a stack of pre-prepared insults to deliver, and when the DOJ is responding to my every tweet with additional unredactions, I don’t think I’m going to change what I’m doing just yet,” he said.
Massie described Bondi as looking "weak and frustrated" at the hearing "when she started talking about the Dow Jones, which has literally nothing to do with her job."
"I thought that looked bad," he said. He also pointed to her "stack of insults that were pre-prepared — in politics you might call it oppo research — and you could see her shuffling through them to try and find which one matched the person who was trying to ask her a question at the time. She found my card like right at the end, as you can see she was looking for it."
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