Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is about to move a monstrous problem President Donald Trump is facing from the back burner to the "front burner," according to two analysts, and Pam Bondi may be in the hot seat next.

Lawmakers on the Hill are debating a legislative package that will reopen the government before the Thanksgiving holiday. In exchange for their votes, eight Democrats agreed to pass the package for a vote on the expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies in December.

Joana Coles, chief content officer of The Daily Beast, and controversial journalist Michael Wolff, who has written four books about Trump, discussed the government reopening and what it means for the president during a new episode of "Inside Trump's Head," a podcast the two analysts co-host.

"Mike Johnson is now reopening the house, which means guess what's back on the docket? The Epstein files," Coles said.

"It was simmering on the back burner, and now it's been moved to the front burner," she added.

Wolff added that it is likely the House will vote to subpoena the Epstein files once the government reopens. Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva is expected to be sworn in soon, and she has said she will vote to release the files once she is seated.

He also predicted that part of the next fight will focus on Attorney General Pam Bondi's statement that she had the files on her desk, ready to be released.

"I assume what she had on her desk was nothing. Blank paper, pieces of paper," Wolff said. "Which is part of the problem. And that is now going to become the next part of this battle."

However, Wolff added that Democrats may be at a disadvantage when it comes to subpoenaing the files.

"They are going to subpoena something, but they don't know what they are subpoenaing," Wolff said. "Then, they'll have to figure out exactly what that is, and the executive branch, which will have to deliver this material, will define what that is."

"I suspect confusion about what it is and where it is, and then what they redact and don't redact," he continued. "So the executive branch, even with a vote in Congress, is still basically in charge of the Epstein files."