POLITICS
4 min read
Trump 'fully supports' Lutnick as calls grow for commerce secretary to resign over Epstein links
US President Trump "fully supports" Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick despite revelations he maintained ties with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, says White House.
Trump 'fully supports' Lutnick as calls grow for commerce secretary to resign over Epstein links
Trump has been "honest and transparent" about ending his association with Epstein, says Karoline Leavitt. / TRT World
February 10, 2026

Washington DC — The White House has affirmed President Donald Trump's support for Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick amidst fresh revelations regarding his ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein that have sparked bipartisan outrage.

Lutnick is at the centre of an uproar following the release of millions of documents from the Jeffrey Epstein case. These documents contradict Lutnick’s previous statements about his relationship with the late American financier.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday that Trump "fully supports" Lutnick.

"Secretary Lutnick remains a very important member of President Trump's team and the president fully supports the secretary," Leavitt said.

During a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing on February 10, 2026 — originally focused on broadband deployment funding — Lutnick was grilled by lawmakers about his ties to Epstein.

He admitted to visiting Epstein's private Caribbean island in 2012 for lunch with his wife, four children, nannies, and another family while on a boat vacation, describing it as a brief, hour-long stop.

Lutnick's admission contradicts his prior claims that he cut ties with Epstein in 2005, deeming him "disgusting" and refusing further contact.

RelatedTRT World - Unredacted Epstein files stir uproar after US lawmakers flag names of 'prominent figures'

Demands for Lutnick to step down

Democrats, such as Senator Chris Van Hollen and Representative Ted Lieu, have demanded Lutnick’s resignation, accusing him of misleading the public.

Some Republicans have joined these calls, particularly as prediction markets bet on his potential resignation.

Democratic Senator Adam Schiff said on Monday that "Lutnick has no business being our Commerce Secretary, and he should resign immediately."

He said Lutnick's denial of Epstein dealings raises serious concerns about his judgement and ethics.

On Sunday, Republican lawmaker Thomas Massie also told US broadcaster CNN that Lutnick "should just resign," citing resignations in politics in Great Britain.

Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House oversight committee, charged in a social media post that Lutnick "has been lying about his relationship with Epstein."

"He said he had no interactions with Epstein after 2005, yet we now know they were in business together," Garcia added.

The documents, released by the Justice Department in late January 2026, reveal Lutnick and Epstein corresponded until 2018, even after Epstein's 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor.

Lutnick has downplayed the connections, insisting he "barely had anything to do with" Epstein and had no real relationship, but the disclosures have sparked bipartisan uproar.

When asked if he observed anything untoward on Little Saint James, infamously known as Epstein Island, Lutnick stated to the hearing that, aside from his family and another couple present, he only encountered staff employed by Epstein on the island.

Prominent figures are facing scrutiny over visits to Little Saint James, linked to what US prosecutors say was underage sex trafficking by Epstein and his accomplices.

Lutnick, a Trump ally, was CEO at Cantor Fitzgerald before becoming US commerce secretary last year.

2006 Trump phone call

President Trump, who knew Epstein for several years, says they had a falling out before Epstein's first arrest. He has repeatedly claimed he knew nothing of Epstein's criminal behaviour.

On Tuesday, Leavitt told reporters that Trump has been "honest and transparent" about ending his association with Epstein while accusing Democrats of using selective leaks and "fake narratives" to smear him politically.

Regarding reports of a 2006 phone call where Trump allegedly praised police for investigating Epstein and said "everyone" knew about his actions, Leavitt said it "may or may not have happened"

"It was a phone call that may or may not have happened in 2006," she said. "I don't know the answer to that question."

"What President Trump has always said is that he kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of his Mar-a-Lago club because Jeffrey Epstein was a creep," she said. "And that remains true in this call. If it did happen it corroborates exactly what President Trump has said from the beginning."

SOURCE:TRT World
Explore
First primaries of 2026 midterm polls take place amid US-Israel war on Iran. Here are some takeaways
US Commerce Secretary agrees to testify in congressional Epstein probe
MAGA circles slam Trump for joining 'Israel's war' on Iran, but US leader retorts 'MAGA is Trump'
US designates Iran 'state sponsor of wrongful detention', potentially leading to travel ban
Trump orders US government to cease using Anthropic following Pentagon's feud with AI firm
Rubio orders US envoys to stay silent as Iran tensions soar —report
Pro-Trump lawyers urge emergency order to widen presidential powers before midterms
Cuba claims 4 killed in terror plot, Washington vows independent verification
Detained Columbia student released after Mamdani call with Trump
Carney begins Asia tour from India as Ottawa says Canadian Sikhs safe from transnational repression
'A lot of questions' — Hillary Clinton calls for Trump to testify as she faces Epstein panel
France's Le Pen says she won't run for president if court orders her to wear electronic tag
US blocks Venezuelan government from paying Maduro's legal fees, lawyer says
Iran negotiators arrive in Geneva for high-stakes US nuclear talks
Blood money: Israeli shadow over El Mencho's killing machine?
Trump prefers diplomacy with Iran, but vows Tehran will 'never' obtain nukes
Trump declares 'Golden Age of America' in first State of the Union of second term
US urges UN member states to stop backing Russia's 'deplorable' war on Ukraine
'This is serious' — Chuck Schumer voices concern as Rubio briefs Gang of 8 on Iran
Democrats claim DOJ 'appears to have' withheld Epstein files related to Trump