
Pete Hegseth suggests he would disobey court ruling against deploying military in LA
The comments before the Senate armed services committee come as Donald Trump faces dozen of lawsuits over his policies, which his administration has responded to by avoiding compliance with orders it dislikes. In response, Democrats have claimed that Trump is sending the country into a constitutional crisis.
California has sued over Trump's deployment of national guard troops to Los Angeles, and, last week, a federal judge ruled that control of soldiers should return to California's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom. An appeals court stayed that ruling and, in arguments on Tuesday, sounded ready to keep the soldiers under Donald Trump's authority.
'I don't believe district courts should be determining national security policy. When it goes to the supreme court, we'll see,' Hegseth told Democratic senator Mazie Hirono. Facing similar questions from another Democrat, Elizabeth Warren, he said: 'If the supreme court rules on a topic, we will abide by that.'
Hegseth was confirmed to lead the Pentagon after three Republican senators and all Democrats voted against his appointment, creating a tie vote on a cabinet nomination for only the second time in history. The tie was broken by the vice-president, JD Vance.
There were few hints of dissatisfaction among GOP senators at the hearing, which was intended to focus on the Pentagon's budgetary needs for the forthcoming fiscal year, but Democrats used it to press for more details on the deployment of troops to Los Angeles, as well as the turmoil that has plagued Hegseth's top aides and the potential for the United States to join Israel's attack on Iran.
Democratic senator Elissa Slotkin asked whether troops deployed to southern California were allowed to arrest protesters or shoot them in the legs, as Trump is said to have attempted to order during his first term.
'If necessary, in their own self-defense, they could temporarily detain and hand over to [Immigration and Customs Enforcement]. But there's no arresting going on,' Hegseth said. On Friday, marines temporarily took into custody a US citizen at a federal building in Los Angeles.
The secretary laughed when asked whether troops could shoot protesters, before telling Slotkin: 'Senator, I'd be careful what you read in books and believing in, except for the Bible.'
An exasperated Slotkin replied: 'Oh my God'.
Trump has publicly mulled the possibility that the United States might strike Iran. Slotkin asked if the Pentagon had plans for what the US military would do after toppling its government.
'We have plans for everything,' Hegseth said, prompting the committee's Republican chair, Roger Wicker, to note that the secretary was scheduled to answer further questions in a behind-closed-doors session later that afternoon.
In addition to an aggressive purge of diversity and equity policies from the military, Hegseth has also ordered that military bases that were renamed under Joe Biden because they honored figures in the Confederacy to revert to their previous names – but officially honoring various US soldiers with the same name.
Virginia senator Tim Kaine said that in his state, several bases had been renamed under Biden in honor of accomplished veterans, and their families were never officially told that the names would be changed back.
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'You didn't call any of the families, and I've spoken with the families, and the families were called by the press. That's how they learned about this. They learned about it from the press,' Kaine said,
He asked Hegseth to pause the renaming of these bases, which the secretary declined to do, instead saying: 'We'll find ways to recognize them.'
Democrats also criticized Hegseth for turmoil in the ranks of his top aides, as well as his decision to name Kingsley Wilson as the Pentagon's press secretary, who has repeatedly shared on social media an antisemitic conspiracy theory.
The Pentagon head had a sharp exchange with Democratic senator Jacky Rosen, who asked whether he would fire Wilson. 'I've worked directly with her. She does a fantastic job, and … any suggestion that I or her or others are party to antisemitism is a mischaracterization.'
'You are not a serious person,' the Nevada lawmaker replied. 'You are not serious about rooting out, fighting antisemitism within the ranks of our DOD. It's despicable. You ought to be ashamed of yourself.'
Rosen then asked if far-right activist Laura Loomer was involved in the firing of a top national security staffer. Hegseth demurred, saying the decision was his to make, but the senator continued to press, even as the committee chair brought down his gavel to signal that she had run out of time for questions.
'I believe your time is up, senator,' Hegseth said. A furious Rosen responded: 'It is not up to you to tell me when my time is up. And I am going to say, Mr Secretary, you're either feckless or complicit. You're not in control of your department.'
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The Guardian
27 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘He has trouble completing a thought': bizarre public appearances again cast doubt on Trump's mental acuity
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The Guardian
27 minutes ago
- The Guardian
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Nashville hands over land beneath city to Elon Musk
Nashville is getting a serious makeover thanks to Tesla billionaire Elon Musk. Musk's The Boring Company has plans to build a futuristic underground tunnel in Tennessee that will transport passengers from the city center to the airport in just eight minutes using electric vehicles. But while the project has support from the state's federal lawmakers, local leaders aren't so sure. One representative called it a 'vanity project for the wealthy' and it has been dubbed the 'Music City Loop'. The tunnel will run 10 miles from the city center to the airport on Nashville's south-east corridor, with its entrance just steps from the airport. The privately funded project will supposedly shuttle Tennesseans between downtown and the airport in only eight minutes. That's a big saving in time from downtown to the airport, which takes about 30 minutes by taxi, rideshare, or bus. The company plans to use electric vehicles to connect city hotspots, similar to an already operating Boring system in Las Vegas. Musk and The Boring Company seemed to have the full support of Republican lawmakers at a press conference announcing the project on July 28. Republican Tennessee Governor Bill Lee said he was excited by the tunnel. 'They could have taken their next underground loop anywhere, but they saw something unique about Tennessee,' he said. 'The best part of all of it is it's 100 percent privately funded. There will be no cost to Tennessee taxpayers.' John Ray Clemens, chair of the Tennessee House Democratic Caucus, hammered the privately funded project as 'fiscally irresponsible and legally suspect'. 'No responsible executive would give away unrestricted and unlimited underground property rights to an unhinged billionaire, who Donald Trump doesn't even trust anymore, and grant him and his company exclusive access rights beneath our city and a monopoly to profit in perpetuity.' The project has yet to receive approval from the Metro Nashville Council or the mayor's office, and Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell was notably absent from the event. In a brief statement about the project, he said: 'We are aware of the state's conversations with The Boring Company, and we have a number of operational questions to understand the potential impacts on Metro and Nashvillians.' Yet, United States Senator Marsha Blackburn seemed to think the impact would be overwhelmingly positive. She posted on X that the company 'couldn't have picked a better new home for their state-of-the-art tunneling technology than Nashville'. She wrote: 'I look forward to seeing the tremendous impact of this investment in our city!' State Representative Aftyn Behn called the tunnel a 'privatization of public infrastructure,' noting that it was designed to benefit a select few 'not the people who actually live and work here'. In his press release about the 'Music City Loop' Behn wrote, 'It's a vanity project for the wealthy, and once again, the Lee administration is rolling out the red carpet for billionaires while working families are stuck in traffic.' 'We rank at the bottom in livability, and yet instead of investing in roads, schools, and transit that benefit everyday Tennesseans, they're floating billion-dollar boondoggles for the ultra-rich,' stated state Senator Heidi Campbell. The decision seems to be just as divisive among citizens as it is among local lawmakers. One local posted on Reddit afterwards: 'And the grift continues. This isn't a much-needed or desirable project. This is a grift meant to line the pockets of the world's richest person. The goal was never providing a decent or even acceptable transit service.' Another commented: 'Could've had a great light rail system and instead get this utter nonsense.' A third wrote: 'What a complete waste of money that could be going to build transit that's actually useful.' Regardless of the public's opinion, The Boring Company is ready to go full speed ahead. Construction will begin immediately following the approval process, according to the Tennessee state government. It could be operational as early as Fall 2026.