Not a Flashback! Calls Mount To Jail Bill and Hillary Clinton

Calls Mount To Jail Bill and Hillary Clinton

Conservative commentator Vince Coglianese stirred the pot this week. He said Bill and Hillary Clinton should be arrested after they declined to testify in the congressional probe into Jeffrey Epstein.

The push comes as the House Oversight Committee, led by Chairman James Comer, prepares a contempt vote after both former officials skipped scheduled depositions. Coglianese, the Daily Caller editorial director, used blunt language on his program.

“Lock ’em up. They just said F you to Congress. And now what? Now what happens? Come on. Come on, Republicans. And James Comer, perfectly good that you’re doing a contempt of Congress proceeding,” Coglianese said. “Let’s get this thing rolling. But every single one of you, from Congress to the Justice Department, all the way through the [President Donald] Trump administration, develop the testicular fortitude to actually do what’s necessary to salvage our country.”

He added: “Because the rest of us are just chomping at the bit to get our country back. Because we’d like to leave something good to our kids and grandkids. What role are you going to play in making sure that happens? And if you’re not going to help, get the hell out of these jobs and we’ll put somebody in who can do it.”

Coglianese pointed to precedent. He noted that figures like Steve Bannon and Peter Navarro served prison time for contempt after refusing Congress. That’s the main argument from those who say the Clintons shouldn’t get special treatment.

Others push back. Legal experts say contempt referrals are only the start. The Justice Department must decide whether to bring charges. That process can drag on. Political battles and legal questions will shape the outcome.

The debate is now both legal and political. Supporters of tougher action call for consistency. Critics warn against turning investigations into political theater. Either way, the vote in the House is a clear next step.

Watch the video and social reaction here:

Congress will vote. The DOJ will decide. The public will watch. The central question remains: is everyone really equal before the law?

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