The House of Representatives rejected a Republican-led effort to strip Democratic U.S. Virgin Islands delegate Stacey Plaskett of her prime spot on the House Intelligence Committee Tuesday evening, after a splinter group of Republicans joined Democrats to defeat the measure.
Lawmakers voted 209 to 214 against formally censuring Plaskett, a nonvoting delegate after recently revealed text messages showed she consulted the late convicted sex predator Jeffrey Epstein during a 2019 congressional hearing. Three Republicans joined Democrats to tank the resolution, and three GOP lawmakers voted present. (RELATED: ‘Quick I’m Up Next’: Dem Del. Plaskett Caught Texting Epstein To Help Steer Questioning During Congressional Hearing)
The censure resolution, offered by Republican South Carolina Rep. Ralph Norman, was drafted in response to recently unearthed texts between Plaskett and Epstein, released as part of a House Oversight Committee document dump last week. The messages appeared to show Plaskett asking Epstein for advice about what to ask former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, who was testifying during the February 2019 hearing.
A handful of Republicans helped defeat resolutions to censure Democratic Reps. LaMonica McIver of New Jersey and Illhan Omar of Minnesota earlier this year.
WASHINGTON, DC – JULY 23: Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC) walks down the steps of the House of Representatives at the U.S. Capitol Building on July 23, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Plaskett attempted to defend herself by characterizing Epstein, whose primary residence was the U.S. Virgin Islands, as a normal interaction with a “constituent.” Epstein was a convicted sex offender by 2008 but only spent 13 months in a county jail due to a controversial plea deal.
“Let me tell you something. I don’t need to get advice on how to question anybody from any individual. I have been a lawyer for 30 years,” Plaskett said on the House floor Tuesday. “I have sought information from confidential informants, from murderers, from other individuals, because I want the truth, not because I need them to tell me what to say.”
Plaskett previously worked for the Department of Justice before starting a career in Congress in January 2015.
In sporadic texts during the hearing, Epstein mentioned former Trump executive assistant Rhona Graff, stating “Cohen brought up RONA [sic] – keeper of the secrets.”
“RONA??” Plaskett responded. “Quick I’m up next is that an acronym,” she asked.
Epstein then clarified, “Thats [sic] his assistant.”
The late convicted sex predator subsequently told Plaskett “Good work” after she finished questioning Cohen.
Norman, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, and other members of the conservative group said Plaskett’s decision to collaborate with Epstein demands a formal rebuke by the lower chamber.
“Using the input of a sex offender to shape questions in an official hearing is UNACCEPTABLE and cannot go unaddressed,” Norman wrote on X.
“Delegate Plaskett’s relationship with Epstein stands in stark contrast to the public image she has curated for herself as a defender of justice and accountability while secretly collaborating with an individual whose crimes against vulnerable women and children shocked the nation,” the resolution reads in part.
Norman, a prominent fiscal hawk, is running in a crowded primary for South Carolina governor during next year’s midterm elections.
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