Democrats have alleged the lack of damning evidence against Trump may mean the justice department withheld incriminating documents.

“You say all the documents are released,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer wrote in a statement. “Does that include all of the co-conspirator memos, the corporate protection memos, the original Palm Beach Police Department reports, etc.?”

“Has every document that mentions the word Trump been released?”

One of Epstein’s victims, Lisa Phillips, told the BBC that she and her fellow survivors were not satisfied by the justice department’s actions on Epstein.

“The [department] has violated all three of our requirements,” she said.

“Number one, many documents still haven’t been disclosed. Number two, the date set for release has long passed. And number three, the DOJ released the names of many of the survivors, and that’s not OK. We feel they’re playing some games with us, but we’re not going to stop fighting.”

Anger and frustration among Trump’s supporters over the administration’s apparent reluctance to release all of its Epstein files – perhaps the most potent threat to the president’s political standing – appears to have diminished with this wave of newly produced documents, however.

While some critics, like former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, continue to condemn the president, much of his Make America Great Again base appears to have moved on from the Epstein news – their attention divided between ongoing unrest in Minneapolis and the FBI’s inquiry into allegations of voting fraud in the 2020 presidential election, among other headline stories.

That does not mean, however, that this story is over.

Democrats, citing legal requirements, are demanding access to unredacted versions of many of the released documents. And the Clinton testimony could create serious political fireworks.

New revelations independent of the justice department’s actions could also rekindle the public’s interest.

But perhaps more significantly, Democrats in Congress have promised to issue similar subpoenas for Trump and other Republicans to testify if they take control of the House of Representatives in November’s midterm national elections.

The president may insist that it is time for the nation to move on, but years after Epstein’s death, this saga has shown that it still has a life of its own.