The biggest mystery in Washington – just why did Melania make that speech?

2 hours ago 1

Michael Koziol

It’s the newest, biggest, most intriguing mystery in Washington – why on earth did Melania Trump make that speech about Jeffrey Epstein, and why did she make it now?

The first lady surprised everyone by delivering a televised address from the White House in which she insisted she never had anything to do with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, didn’t meet Donald Trump through him and was not friendly with his jailed accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

Melania Trump arrives to make her surprise statement on Thursday.AP

It seemed to come from nowhere, though it was planned at least a day in advance. A media advisory went out on Wednesday morning ahead of the Thursday afternoon event. This correspondent thought it would be about the first conviction under the Take It Down Act, an anti-harassment bill championed by the first lady, and gave it a miss.

That turned out to be a mistake. “The lies linking me with the disgraceful Jeffrey Epstein need to end today,” Trump said, reading from her prepared remarks.

“I am not Epstein’s victim,” she said, and dismissed what she called fake images and statements circulating on social media for years about her and the deceased paedophile.

Not only did the first lady distance herself from Epstein and Maxwell, but she called for their victims to appear before Congress in a hearing centred on survivors that could uncover the truth. “Epstein was not alone ... Each and every woman should have her day to tell her story in public if she wishes.”

The sentiment was OK – though Epstein survivors and members of Virginia Giuffre’s family said in a statement that his victims had already said their piece, and asking more of them now was a deflection of responsibility.

But what was striking was the timing. Usually, such a solemn, prepared declaration would be made following a damaging story that had just been published. But this came out of the blue.

As late-night host Jimmy Kimmel observed: “Melania emerged from the rubble of the East Wing … and delivered a doozy of a prepared statement demanding that we stop talking about something no one was talking about.”

Rumours quickly started swirling that new Epstein revelations involving the first lady might be about to break, and she was attempting to stymie the story with a pre-emptive denial. There is, as yet, no evidence for such a theory, other than Trump’s speech itself.

Then, of course, comes the theory that this was a deliberate distraction. This notion is a perennial favourite of political commentators, especially those who consider themselves armchair experts in the dark arts of political strategy. In this frame, nearly everything is a calculated distraction from one thing or another.

And it’s always a possibility in an administration obsessed with media coverage – particularly television. MAGA influencer Steve Bannon speaks openly about how the administration can manipulate the discourse by “flooding the zone with shit” to diverge and distract.

But it would be a strange thing indeed to try to distract from the unpopular war in Iran with an issue that Donald Trump has always shown himself to be especially disdainful of: the Epstein saga. Indeed, the two matters that have most challenged Trump’s mastery of his MAGA base are the Iran war and Epstein.

Then there is the other possibility: that Melania Trump really did tire of being the subject of online innuendo and decided to do something about it.

Not known for her public statements, the underlying reason for Melania Trump opting to speak out now remains unclear. AP

One of her advisers, Marc Beckman, did a series of interviews with right-wing media on Saturday (US time), delivering a rehearsed message: that there were three achievements of the first lady’s surprise address.

One, she cleared her record. Two, she became a “champion” for the victims. Three, she became a “real leader” in Washington by calling on Congress to act.

But all of those are post-facto justifications from a spinner; none are actual reasons. For that, we might just have to wait and see.

The only thing we can say for sure right now is that the first lady has reawakened a political issue that had, for now, died off. She has breathed new life into the Epstein saga at a time when her husband needs to take control of the political narrative and refocus it on more friendly ground.

That’s a weird flex, at the very least.

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Michael KoziolMichael Koziol is the North America correspondent for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald. He is a former Sydney editor, Sun-Herald deputy editor and a federal political reporter in Canberra.Connect via X or email.

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