
Pete Hegseth renames USNS Harvey Milk, says 'people want to be proud of the ship they're sailing in'
Pete Hegseth, the Secretary of Defense under President Donald Trump, has announced the renaming of the USNS Harvey Milk. Vowing to 'take the politics out of ship naming', Hegseth criticized the trend of naming US Navy ships after political activists. Harvey Milk was notable for being the first openly gay politician to be elected to public office, with him becoming a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.
The ship, which is a fleet replenishment oiler, will now be named the USNS Oscar V. Peterson. As Pete Hegseth explained in his announcement, Oscar Peterson was a World War 2 soldier who served on the USS Neosho and died in battle against Japanese forces in the Battle of the Coral Sea.
Pete Hegseth said USNS Harvey Milk name was a political statement
I am pleased to announce that the United States Navy is renaming the USNS Harvey Milk to the USNS Oscar V. Peterson.We are taking the politics out of ship naming. pic.twitter.com/2ypwAQGdAl
Stating his belief that naming the ship USNS Harvey Milk during the Obama administration had been a politically motivated exercise, Pete Hegseth claimed that renaming the ship to USNS Oscar V. Peterson was an effort at making the entire process apolitical.
He stated that 'people want to be proud of the ship they're sailing in', and that honoring Oscar V. Peterson's sacrifice would bring about that pride.
As Hegseth noted, Oscar V. Peterson was posthumously rewarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his sacrifice.
Despite his claims of removing political bias from the ship naming process, however, his decision drew sharp reactions from his detractors and political opponents, with many Democratic politicians characterizing his announcement as a deliberate attempt at erasing Harvey Milk's legacy.
Democratic lawmakers have slammed Pete Hegseth's decision
Erasing Harvey Milk's name is disgusting, blatant discrimination—and during Pride Month to boot.He served the U.S. Navy and his country honorably, and he was assassinated while serving the public and fighting for LGBTQ+ rights.Hegseth should be ashamed of himself and reverse… pic.twitter.com/qc6pGh9chE
Pete Hegseth had first revealed his intention to rename USNS Harvey Milk earlier this month on June 3, prior to today's formal announcement. Democrat lawmakers were quick to announce their disapproval in response.
Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer said that 'Hegseth should be ashamed of himself and reverse this immediately'.
Nancy Pelosi called Pete Hegseth's plan "a shameful, vindictive erasure of those who fought to break down barriers for all to chase the American dream.' She also accused Hegseth of being spiteful, and said that his decision would do nothing to strengthen America's national security interests.
Sean Penn, who'd portrayed Harvey Milk in the 2008 biopic "Milk", has also mocked Pete Hegseth's decision by claiming that the Secretary of Defence had demoted himself to the rank of 'Chief PETTY officer'.
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Time of India
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Manhattan's progressive man
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He was also backed by a super Political Action Committee that raised $25 million to bankroll his candidacy. The fact that Mr. Cuomo had resigned from his gubernatorial duties a few years ago after being embroiled in sexual harassment cases did not deter him from attempting to obscure this record while running a conventional campaign that featured attack ads targeting Mr. Mamdani's identity and views. Grassroots mobilisation Mr. Mamdani overcame these challenges by relying on massive grassroots mobilisation — reportedly 50,000 volunteers organised by the DSA's New York Chapter conducted a door-to-door campaign that reached an astounding 1.5 million doors. Focusing on one key issue — 'affordability' in New York's high-cost economy — Mr. Mamdani pledged to address this through a series of concrete measures. These included freezing rents for nearly a million New Yorkers in rent-stabilised apartments, providing free city buses (based on a pilot programme he had helped start as a lawmaker), creating city-owned grocery stores that would keep food costs low by buying wholesale and operating on city land, and providing childcare for infants and toddlers. The focus on livelihood-based 'bread-and-butter economic issues' helped his campaign build a broad coalition of support, including in neighbourhoods that were won by Donald Trump in the 2024 elections. Notably, Mr. Mamdani's message was tailored to redirect working-class frustration away from the Right's targets — immigrants and marginalised groups — toward a different culprit: billionaires. The endorsements by the doyen of the American democratic Left, Bernie Sanders, and its key public figure, AOC, also bolstered his candidacy. Interestingly, Mr. Mamdani managed to register a strong win while unapologetically taking a pro-Palestine position, accusing Israel of committing 'apartheid and genocide in Gaza', supporting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, and openly embracing his Muslim identity. This stood in sharp contrast to the Democratic Presidential campaign in 2024, where candidate Kamala Harris tacked to the right of centre, refused to halt arms sales to Israel, and did not allow a Palestinian voice to speak at the Democratic Convention. In many ways, Mr. Mamdani's campaign — focused on welfare issues while celebrating his identity as the son of immigrant parents and a practising Muslim — represented everything the Trump administration has demonised during its current tenure. Seen in this light, Mr. Mamdani's victory could possibly be the biggest win for the democratic socialist movement that has taken root in U.S. cities since Mr. Sanders's national campaign. 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Republicans are already working to brand Mr. Mamdani as the radical face of the Democratic Party, while the media establishment that supports the GOP has sought to use his identity to tarnish his record, with one Republican Congress representative's fundraising appeal branding him as a 'Hamas Terrorist sympathiser'. His brand of democratic socialism may indeed prove a difficult sell in the small towns and red bastions of middle America. Ultimately, Mr. Mamdani's victory may be less a simple blueprint to be copied and more a mirror held up to the Democratic Party. It has forced a reckoning, proving that a campaign centred on economic justice and unapologetic principles can generate a powerful movement. The question for party leadership is not whether they can perfectly replicate a New York City race, but whether they are willing to embrace the grassroots energy, class-based populism, and bold vision that this stunning victory represents. The future of the party may well depend on their answer.