NEED TO KNOW

  • Massie filed FEC paperwork for 2028 the same day Trump called him a "sleazebag"
  • He has not committed to which office — House, Senate, or White House
  • Seven months and speech-or-debate immunity remain his Epstein leverage

FRANKFORT, KY (TDR) — Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission for the 2028 cycle on Monday, six days after losing the most expensive House primary in U.S. history to a Trump-endorsed challenger.

The big picture: Massie answered his defeat with a procedural filing and an open hedge on which seat he wants. The leverage war with the president is not over.

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  • Massie lost to retired Navy SEAL officer Ed Gallrein 54.9 to 45.1 percent on May 19
  • The filing names his Kentucky committee as principal but leaves the office "to be determined"
  • Hours earlier, Trump called him a "major sleazebag" in a Memorial Day post

Why it matters: A backbench congressman just spent the most expensive primary in House history being removed, and he is still publicly daring the White House. The dollar figure tells you what the dissent cost. The FEC filing tells you it was not enough to silence it.

Driving the news: On NBC's Meet the Press Sunday, Massie said he would use his remaining seven months in Congress to read additional redacted names from the Epstein files on the House floor, citing the Constitution's speech-or-debate protections.

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What they're saying:

Yes, but: Massie's leverage is real, but the math of his defeat is not ambiguous. He lost by nearly 10 points in a district he had held since 2012, and the FEC paperwork is a fundraising vehicle — not a campaign. A presidential bid would require a national operation he has never built, and a Senate run in Kentucky means going through Mitch McConnell's machine.

Between the lines: The Epstein threat is what keeps this alive. A defeated congressman with seven months and constitutional immunity to name names from the House floor is a different problem than a defeated congressman who just goes home. Whether Massie runs for anything in 2028 may matter less than what he reads into the Congressional Record before January.

What's next:

  • Massie's term runs through January 2027
  • Any floor speeches naming additional Epstein figures would test DOJ's posture
  • Kentucky's 2028 Senate seat and the GOP presidential primary are both open lanes

Is a defeated congressman with constitutional immunity and a list of names more dangerous to the White House than one still in leadership?

Sources

This report was compiled using reporting from Mediaite, The Hill, Newsweek, Spectrum News 1, Raw Story, and The Daily Beast

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