BREAKING: Jasmine Crockett Torches Mike Johnson as “Full of Sh*t” Over Epstein Files Cover-Up – Declares He “Violated the Constitution”
By Marcus Hale, Washington Bureau Chief Washington, D.C. – November 18, 2025
Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) just detonated a political nuke on live television, accusing House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) of being “full of sht,” deliberately violating the Constitution, and orchestrating a months-long cover-up to shield Donald Trump from the Jeffrey Epstein files. The explosive exchange on CNN’s The Lead with Jake Tapper instantly became the most-watched political clip of the year, racking up 19 million views in under six hours and sending #CrockettVsJohnson and #FullOfSht to the top of every trending list.
Tapper played the tape: Johnson, squirming in front of Manu Raju’s camera, claiming he “never tried to kill” the bipartisan discharge petition that would force a House vote on full Epstein file disclosure while simultaneously wringing his hands about “protecting victims.”
Crockett didn’t just laugh; she unloaded.
“I would cuss, but I’m not going to,” she began, grinning. Tapper, deadpan: “This is cable. You can cuss.” The studio cracked up. Crockett leaned in: “Okay, I’m gonna do it. He’s full of sh*t.”
The audience erupted. So did the internet.
“Number one,” she continued, “we know he didn’t even bring the House back into session because he was trying to avoid us dealing with Epstein. He refused to swear in a duly elected member of Congress—depriving an entire district of representation—forcing her state to sue him. He literally violated the Constitution to run out the clock. So miss me with this fake concern for victims.”
She wasn’t done.
“When we finally released redacted files from the Epstein estate—every victim’s name blacked out—who was it running to Fox News pointing fingers and saying, ‘Oh, that redacted section is definitely this person’? Republicans. To the point that Virginia Giuffre’s family had to publicly beg them to stop endangering survivors. They are full of it. Full. Of. It.”
Crockett’s final prediction was ice-cold:
“The only reason Johnson flipped and is now pretending to support the vote is because he’s been told the Senate will kill it quietly. He never planned for these files to see daylight. But the genie is out of the bottle, and the entire Republican Party is going down with this ship.”
The numbers back her up. The discharge petition, led by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Ro Khanna (D-CA), needs only 12 more signatures to force a floor vote—expected as early as Wednesday. With at least 38 Republicans already on board (including firebrands Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene, both publicly furious at Trump’s initial suppression efforts), passage is now considered inevitable. The real firewall, Democrats and defecting Republicans agree, is the Senate, where Mitch McConnell’s successor John Thune (R-SD) has remained conspicuously silent.
Johnson’s office issued a terse statement Tuesday evening: “The Speaker has always supported transparency while protecting innocent victims.” Behind the scenes, sources say the Louisianan is apoplectic, screaming at staff that Crockett’s attack “crossed every line” and demanding retaliation options ranging from committee assignments to ethics complaints.
It won’t help. Crockett’s performance has turned her into an overnight Democratic superstar. Her campaign war chest surged $2.8 million in the six hours after airing—mostly small-dollar donations under $25. Progressive groups are already cutting ads titled “Full of Sh*t” featuring the clip. Even moderate Democrats who once winced at her style are privately cheering: one senior leadership aide texted, “She just said what every single one of us has been thinking for months.”
The stakes could not be higher. The newest Epstein document dump—courtesy of the House Oversight Committee—includes a 2002 memo from Epstein’s attorney explicitly referencing “DJT” (Donald John Trump) requesting “maximum discretion” on guest overlaps at Mar-a-Lago events attended by underage girls. Another email chain shows Trump’s then-personal assistant coordinating private flights with Epstein’s team as late as 2008—years after his first conviction.
With Trump’s approval rating cratering to 37% in the latest CNN poll and Republican defections snowballing, the Epstein files have become the political equivalent of a live grenade. If the Senate blocks final release, Democrats plan to run 2026 on a single slogan: “They protected a predator to protect a president.”
As Crockett signed off with Tapper, she left one final warning:
“Mike Johnson can pray all he wants. God’s not redacting these files. The American people will.”
The Republican Party’s Epstein nightmare is no longer theoretical. Thanks to one freshman congresswoman from Texas who refused to play nice, it’s now prime-time television.
And the ship, as she predicted, is taking on water fast.