Speaker Johnson Called Out For Not Swearing In Adelita Grijalva

House Speaker Mike Johnson is under growing fire after a tense exchange with Senator ___ (D-AZ), who publicly accused him of deliberately refusing to swear in newly elected Democratic Representative Adelita Grijalva. The senator alleged that Johnsonโ€™s delay is a calculated move to stall an upcoming House vote on whether to release the long-suppressed Epstein filesโ€”documents that could expose the full extent of Jeffrey Epsteinโ€™s powerful network of associates.

The confrontation reportedly took place during a joint leadership meeting on Capitol Hill, where the Arizona senator pressed Johnson on the delay. Witnesses say Johnson attempted to deflect, citing โ€œprocedural timing issues,โ€ but the senator shot back that the Speaker was โ€œweaponizing procedure to shield the guilty.โ€

Johnson, who has cultivated an image as a devout Christian and moral conservative, now finds himself in an increasingly awkward positionโ€”forced to reconcile his public faith with what critics see as a willingness to protect the powerful at the expense of truth and transparency. โ€œYou canโ€™t claim to walk in the light while covering for people who trafficked in darkness,โ€ one Democratic aide remarked after the exchange.

The late financier Jeffrey Epstein was famously connected to some of the most influential figures in politics, business, and entertainment. Among them was Donald Trump, then a New York real estate mogul and now President of the United States. The Trump administrationโ€™s handling of the Epstein files has only fueled suspicion that critical evidenceโ€”particularly anything implicating high-level figuresโ€”is being withheld from public view. Officials have repeatedly promised a โ€œmeasuredโ€ release, but months of delays have left watchdogs, journalists, and victimsโ€™ advocates convinced the White House is hiding something.

Privately, some insiders suggest that Speaker Johnson may personally favor full transparency. However, given the Trump administrationโ€™s well-documented record of punishing perceived disloyalty, Johnson is said to be under immense pressure to toe the line. The Speaker, they claim, fears political retaliationโ€”or worse, a full-scale MAGA backlashโ€”if he defies the administrationโ€™s wishes and allows the House to move forward on the Epstein vote.

For now, the standoff continues. Representative-elect Grijalva remains in limbo, waiting to be officially sworn in while the partisan tug-of-war plays out behind the scenes. Whether Johnsonโ€™s delay is a procedural quirk or a deliberate act of political obstruction, one thing is certain: the issue isnโ€™t going away. At some point, Speaker Johnson will have no choice but to seat the incoming Democrat from Arizonaโ€”and when he does, the House may finally be forced to confront the explosive truth behind the Epstein files.