The Arizona Democrat and allies say it’s related to an attempt to delay the release of files related to the late disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
On September 23, Adelita Grijalva was elected to Arizona’s 7th Congressional District. But three weeks later, she hasn’t been sworn in to her seat, leaving more than 800,000 constituents without representation in the House.
As the government remains shut down and the U.S. House is out of session, Grijalva and Democrats are crying foul. They’re accusing House Speaker Mike Johnson of intentionally delaying swearing in Grijalva because she would be the final signature on a measure forcing a House vote to release files related to the late disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
“Speaker Johnson is protecting pedophiles. That’s what this is all about,” Democratic Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona said at a Wednesday news conference with Grijalva, Arizona Democrats and members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.
On the delay in being sworn in, Grijalva said, “There is no reason other than politics.”
“The people of Southern Arizona have voted clearly, yet more than 812,000 people are still denied their voice in Congress,” she said. “This delay is not procedural. It’s intentional.”
Here’s what to know:

Why has Johnson not sworn in Grijalva?
Johnson has repeatedly said he will swear in Grijalva when Senate Democrats pass a stopgap measure known as a continuing resolution to end the shutdown and reopen the government.
While the House has been on recess now for three weeks, it has gaveled in for brief pro forma sessions where no legislative business is conducted. Grijalva has pointed out that two Florida Republicans, Reps. Jimmy Patronis and Randy Fine, were sworn into office in pro forma sessions after winning special elections to their seats in April. Rep. James Walkinshaw, a Virginia Democrat, was also sworn in a day after his special election win in September.
The speaker has given various explanations for why he hasn’t sworn in Grijalva in a pro forma session. Last week, Johnson engaged in a heated back-and-forth with Gallego and Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona outside his office. He called Gallego’s claims “absurd,” saying that the timing of Grijalva’s swearing in “has nothing to do” with Epstein and that Democrats are “experts in red herrings.”
In a Tuesday news conference, Johnson pointed out that GOP Rep. Julia Letlow of Louisiana was sworn in 25 days after her special election win in March 2021. He also said that Grijalva “deserves to have all the pomp and circumstance that everybody else does.”
“She deserves to have a full House of members and go down and do the speech and have her family and friends in the balcony. That hasn’t been scheduled because we haven’t had that session yet.”
On Wednesday, Grijalva said, “I don’t need bells and whistles. I don’t need pomp and circumstance. I just need to get to work for Southern Arizona.”
What can Democrats do?
Grijalva said Wednesday that she was “looking at every possible option that we have” to compel Johnson to seat her.
“This is really unprecedented to have a speaker that is obstructing the swearing-in of a member of Congress,” she said.
Grijalva’s election win has now been formally certified by election officials in Arizona.
“Ms. Grijalva no longer needs a House resolution to be sworn into office. With the House in possession of the certificate of election, it is now a simple ministerial duty to administer the oath of office,” Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, a Democrat, wrote in a Tuesday letter to Johnson.
Mayes said Johnson was acting “in violation of the Constitution” by not swearing in Grijalva and threatened “prompt legal action” if he does not swear her in immediately or “provide a reasonable explanation as to when she will be seated.” It’s unclear what such a challenge would look like — while there have been disputes in Congress over seating members who ran in close or contested elections in the past, Grijalva decisively won her race with over 70 percent of the vote.
“Arizona’s right to a full delegation, and the right of the residents of CD 7 to representation from the person they recently voted for, are not up for debate and may not be delayed or used as leverage in negotiations about unrelated legislation,” Mayes wrote.
On Tuesday night, members of the House Democratic Women’s Caucus held a protest, marching to Johnson’s office to demand he swear in Grijalva. At the time, Johnson was at the White House for a ceremony posthumously awarding Charlie Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
“Last night, they played some games, they stormed my office,” Johnson said at a Wednesday news conference. “They engaged in all sorts of political stunts and antics.”
What does this have to do with Jeffrey Epstein?
Epstein survivors, members of both parties in Congress and many in President Donald Trump’s base have called for more transparency surrounding Epstein, who in 2019 died by suicide in prison while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges.
Trump, who was friendly with Epstein in the 1990s and early 2000s but said the two had a falling out before Epstein became a convicted sex offender, has dismissed the Epstein matter as “a Democrat hoax.”
Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of California are leading a bipartisan effort to direct the Department of Justice to release the full tranche of files, estimated at 100,000 pages, it has connected to Epstein. The House Oversight Committee is also conducting an investigation into the Epstein case and has subpoenaed files from the Justice Department and Epstein’s estate.
Lawmakers from both parties have called for the government to release more information about Epstein, and some top officials in Trump’s Justice Department had promised they would release the so-called Epstein files before they took office. They later concluded that they could not release all the information, saying it was out of concern for survivors’ personal information. Many have questioned whether the Justice Department could share more documents.
“There is zero question in my mind that a huge, huge part of this is around buying time around the Epstein issue. They are scrambling. They don’t know what to do,” Rep. Yassamin Ansari, a first-term Arizona Democrat and member of the House Oversight Committee, said at the Wednesday news conference.
Johnson sent lawmakers home for a five-week recess early in July after the discord over the Epstein files effectively ground House business to a halt.
“And it wasn’t until there was so much pressure on Republicans in Congress that in one subcommittee of the Oversight Committee, we were able to get several Republicans to join us, and that’s how the subpoena even came to light,” Ansari said. “If it were up to Mike Johnson, there would never have been an Oversight investigation.”
Johnson has said he supports releasing more of the files but opposes Khanna and Massie’s measure, citing the need to protect survivors’ personal information and the House Oversight Committee’s ongoing investigation into the Epstein matter. Khanna and Massie are aiming to circumvent leadership’s opposition with a procedural tool called a discharge petition, which requires 218 signatures to force a vote on the House floor.
All sitting House Democrats and three Republican women — Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert and Nancy Mace — have signed onto the measure. Grijalva would be the 218th signature.
Ansari said the White House is mounting a “pressure campaign” on the Republican women who have signed the discharge petition, which White House officials have deemed “a hostile act.”
“They are using this time that they are not swearing in Congresswoman-elect Grijalva to try to put as much pressure as possible on, what I have heard, Lauren Boebert, especially, to get her to come off of that petition so that Adelita would not be the 218th signature,” Ansari said.
TAKE ACTION
🏛️ 1. Contact House Speaker Mike Johnson Directly
The Speaker has sole authority to administer the oath of office. Public pressure on his office can make a difference.
Call or email:
📞 (202) 225-4000
✉️ [email protected]
or use the House contact form: https://www.speaker.gov/contact
Suggested message:
“I am calling to demand that Speaker Mike Johnson immediately swear in Adelita Grijalva, duly elected to represent Arizona’s 7th Congressional District. More than 800,000 Americans deserve representation, and this delay violates the Constitution and the will of the voters.”
📨 2. Contact Your Own Representatives
Whether they’re Democrats or Republicans, ask your U.S. House member and both senators to publicly support Grijalva’s right to be seated.
You can find their contact info here:
👉 https://www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative
👉 https://www.senate.gov/senators/senators-contact.htm
Encourage them to issue public statements or join letters demanding Grijalva’s swearing-in.
📣 3. Use Social Media to Build Public Pressure
Tag congressional leaders, major media outlets, and relevant hashtags to raise visibility.
Use hashtags:
#SeatGrijalvaNow #RepresentationMatters #AZ07 #ReleaseTheFiles #DoYourJob
Tag leaders:
-
@SpeakerJohnson
-
@RepRubenGallego
-
@SenMarkKelly
-
@AdelitaForAZ
-
@RepRoKhanna
-
@RepThomasMassie
Sample tweet/post:
812,000 Arizonans still have no voice in Congress. Speaker Johnson must #SeatGrijalvaNow. Democracy means every district gets representation — no exceptions.
Protect your rights. Protect Freedom of the Press. Donate today.