Hillary Clinton clashes with Nancy Mace during Epstein deposition before House Oversight Committee
Hillary Clinton sat for a deposition before the House Oversight Committee as part of its investigation into deceased convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, and the exchange with Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) turned combative almost immediately.
Mace opened with a simple question: "How do you know Howard Lutnick?" Clinton's answer veered straight into September 11th.
"I know Howard Lutnick because when I was senator, on 9/11, the firm he headed, Cantor Fitzgerald, suffered the greatest loss of life, as I recall something like 650 of his employees were murdered by terrorists that day."
She added that Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick "missed being a victim because he was delayed dropping his child off at kindergarten." The former Secretary of State then told Mace that "this was what I spent my time doing," framing her relationship with Lutnick entirely through the lens of post-9/11 grief and public service.
Mace wasn't buying it.
The email question Clinton couldn't shake
As reported by Breitbart, the South Carolina Republican pressed Clinton on something more specific: an email she said Lutnick sent to Epstein "and his people" to raise money for Clinton, describing it as "an intimate event for you at his offices at Cantor Fitzgerald."
Clinton continued to deny that she tried to get Epstein to give her money, pushing back on Mace's framing directly:
"If you have an email with me asking Jeffrey Epstein for money…"
The sentence trailed off, but the implication was clear: Clinton wanted to distinguish between someone else soliciting on her behalf and her personally making the ask. It's a familiar Clinton maneuver. The question isn't whether the solicitation happened. It's whether her fingerprints are on it in the precise way that would make the denial technically false.
Mace didn't let up. She told Clinton plainly:
"I'm doing the job that you would not do and refused to do as Secretary of State."
When Clinton pushed back, Mace grounded her questioning in something personal:
"I'm a survivor, trying to look out for other survivors."
The 9/11 shield
Clinton's instinct to pivot to September 11th is worth examining. No one disputes the horror of what happened to Cantor Fitzgerald that day. No one disputes that Lutnick's story is harrowing. But invoking the deadliest terrorist attack on American soil to explain away a question about Jeffrey Epstein's fundraising connections is a rhetorical move designed to make the questioner look cruel for pressing further.
It's a shield, not an answer.
Mace asked how Clinton knew Lutnick. The relevant answer, in the context of an Epstein investigation, would address the nature of those financial and social connections. Instead, Clinton delivered a monologue about terrorism victims. The emotional weight of 9/11 doesn't change the fact that an email apparently exists connecting Lutnick, Epstein, and a Clinton fundraiser. Those are separate questions, and conflating them is a choice.
The broader Epstein investigation
This deposition comes as files relating to Epstein were released by the Department of Justice. Those files reportedly include emails between Lutnick and Epstein, as well as references to coordination for a trip to Epstein's infamous private island. Lutnick has reportedly denied any wrongdoing.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) has called for both Lutnick and President Donald Trump to testify before the committee regarding "their relationships" with Epstein, according to NBC News reporting. That call is notable mostly for its transparent political motivation. Democrats spent years resisting any serious Epstein accountability when it threatened their own. Now that DOJ files have surfaced under a new administration, the appetite for testimony has suddenly materialized.
The pattern is familiar. When Epstein's connections implicated powerful figures on the left, the story was treated as tabloid gossip. When those same threads touch anyone near the current administration, it becomes an urgent matter of congressional oversight. The inconsistency tells you everything about the seriousness of the inquiry.
What the deposition revealed
The substance of the Clinton deposition matters less than the posture. Clinton arrived ready to deflect, invoke tragedy, and parse language. Mace arrived with specific claims about specific emails. One of them was asking questions. The other was working very hard not to answer them.
The American public has watched this routine for thirty years. The careful denials. The lawyered distinctions between "I asked" and "someone asked on my behalf." The righteous indignation when pressed. The pivot to unrelated moral authority.
None of it explains why Jeffrey Epstein's name keeps appearing in the orbit of people who insist they barely knew him.




