Four
Takeaways From Hegseth’s Confirmation Hearing
President-elect
Donald J. Trump’s pick for defense secretary said nothing that would alienate
the Republican senators on the Armed Services Committee.
Video
transcript
0:00/3:07
Democrats
Question Hegseth About Misconduct Allegations
Democrats on
the Senate Armed Services Committee called Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald
J. Trump’s pick for secretary of defense, unfit to serve. Meanwhile,
Republicans praised Mr. Hegseth’s record and performance.
“The
totality of your own writings and alleged conduct would disqualify any service
member from holding any leadership position in the military, much less being
confirmed as the secretary of defense.” “Have you ever made unwanted requests
for sexual favors or committed any verbal or physical harassment or assault of
a sexual nature? The fact is that your own lawyer said that you entered into an
N.D.A. and paid a person who accused you of raping her a sum of money to make
sure that she did not file a complaint. I have read multiple reports of your
regularly being drunk at work. Will you resign as secretary of defense if you
drink on the job, which is a 24/7 position?” “I’ve made this commitment on
behalf of —” “Will you resign as secretary of defense?” “I’ve made this
commitment on behalf of the men and women I’m serving —” “I’m not hearing an
answer to my question. So I’m going to move on.” “You claim that this was all
anonymous. We have seen records with names attached to all of these, including
the name of your own mother. So don’t make this into some anonymous press
thing.” “I’m quoting you from the podcast. ‘Women shouldn’t be in combat at
all.’ What I see is that there’s a 32-day period in which you suddenly have
another description about your views of women in the military, and I just want
to know what changed in the 32 days that the song you sang is not the song you
come in here today to sing?” “Senator, the concerns I have and the concerns of
many have had, especially in ground combat units, is that in pursuit of certain
percentages or quotas, standards have been changed.” “Our adversaries watch
closely during times of transition, and any sense that the Department of
Defense that keeps us safe is being steered by someone who is wholly unprepared
for the job, puts America at risk. And I am not willing to do that.” “I know
what I don’t know. I know I’ve never run an organization of three million
people with a budget of $850 billion.” “Why do you want to do this job? What’s
your, what drives you?” “Because I love my country, Senator. And I’ve dedicated
my life to the warfighters.” “He is a decorated post-9/11 combat veteran. He
will inject a new warrior ethos into the Pentagon, a spirit that can cascade
from the top down.”
Sharon
LaFraniere
By Sharon
LaFraniere
Reporting
from Washington
Jan. 14,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/14/us/pete-hegseth-confirmation-hearing-takeaways.html
Pete
Hegseth’s four-hour hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee on
Tuesday was strikingly contentious. Democrats derided him as blatantly
unqualified to oversee the Defense Department’s three million employees and
$849 billion budget. Republicans acknowledged that he was an unconventional
pick, but said he was just what the Pentagon needed. And Senator Joni Ernst,
the Iowa Republican who is an influential member of the panel, said after the
hearing that she had been won over.
Here are
four takeaways from the hearing:
Hegseth
looks as if he has the votes to get out of committee.
Despite all
the fireworks at the proceeding, it seems that Mr. Hegseth has the votes he
needs to move on. None of his answers seemed to disturb the Republicans who
control the committee.
A vote has
been scheduled for Monday after President-elect Donald J. Trump is sworn in and
Mr. Hegseth’s nomination is expected to become official.
Less than
six weeks ago, Ms. Ernst, a veteran with a reputation for being a principled
leader on matters of sexual assault and the military, had voiced reservations
about Mr. Hegseth.
But Mr.
Trump’s hard-line backers paid for ads in Ms. Ernst’s home state, questioned
her Republican bona fides on social media and even threatened to run primary
challenges against her in 2026 to push her toward backing Mr. Hegseth as the
nominee.
Several
hours after the hearing ended, she announced her support for him on WHO
Newsradio 1040, a radio station in Des Moines.
Her
questioning of Mr. Hegseth during the session was friendly. She pressed him
repeatedly on the importance of auditing the Pentagon — a relatively safe
topic. She also encouraged him to repeat promises she has said he had made to
her privately about appointing a senior officer to strengthen her past work to
prevent sexual assault and rape in the military.
Her support
suggests that, barring new developments, Mr. Hegseth is now on a path to
winning confirmation by the full Senate. Ms. Ernst was considered a key vote
who could sway other Republicans. With her on board, his prospects of success
have grown.
Hegseth
portrayed his life as a redemption story.
Mr. Hegseth
repeatedly refused to say whether an accusation of sexual assault or excessive
drinking or marital infidelity should disqualify someone from leading the
Pentagon. He also did not promise that he’d resign if he were to break his
promise not to drink if confirmed.
In general,
he skirted specific allegations about his personal conduct, simply claiming
that he had been the victim of false allegations by anonymous sources,
circulated by media organizations he said were determined to destroy him.
“I’m not a
perfect person, but redemption is real.” he said at one point. He also said, “I
have failed in things in my life, and thankfully I’m redeemed by my lord and
savior Jesus.”
The one
senator who seemed to get under his skin was Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia.
Mr. Kaine pressed him about the allegation that he raped a woman in 2017 in
Monterey, Calif., while he was married to his second wife and two months after
his girlfriend, now his third wife, had given birth to his child.
The episode
resulted in no criminal charges. Mr. Hegseth, who said the encounter was
consensual, paid the woman an undisclosed amount in a settlement.
“So you
think you are completely cleared because you committed no crime?” Mr. Kaine
demanded. “How do you explain your judgment?”
He faced
fierce queries about his views on women in combat.
Some of the
toughest questioning was over Mr. Hegseth’s previous statements that women
should not serve in combat roles. Democratic senators accused him of modulating
those views purely in hopes of winning a cabinet post.
Mr. Hegseth
said: “Yes, women will have access to ground combat roles, given the standards
remain high, and we will have a review to ensure the standards have not been
eroded.”
Female
Democrats in particular assailed him over his earlier comments. Senator Kirsten
Gillibrand of New York sounded especially angry, saying his statements were
“brutal and they’re mean and they disrespect men and women who are willing to
die for this country.”
Senator
Jeanne Shaheen, Democrat of New Hampshire, asked whether women would have a
fair shot of promotion if he led the Pentagon given his earlier suggestions
that they make the military a less lethal force. He said they would.
Republicans
praised his communication skills, honed as a television anchor.
Mr. Hegseth
and his Republican allies on the panel made the case that his lack of
experience compared with previous defense secretaries would be a plus.
Mr. Hegseth
said: “As President Trump also told me, we’ve repeatedly placed people atop the
Pentagon with supposedly the right credentials, whether they’re retired
generals, academics or defense contractor executives. And where has it gotten
us?”
Republican
senators hailed his skills as a communicator. After running two small nonprofit
organizations, both of which ended up in debt, Mr. Hegseth was a weekend anchor
on “Fox & Friends” for seven years.
During the
hearing, he generally spoke confidently, typically revealing little evidence of
being rattled.
Democrats
said his lack of experience showed in his answers.
Senator
Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat from Illinois who is also a veteran, gave him a
type of foreign affairs quiz, asking him to name the countries in ASEAN — the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations. He could not. At another point she told
him: “Do a little homework” before such sessions.
Sharon
LaFraniere is an investigative reporter currently focusing on Republican
candidates in the 2024 presidential election. More about Sharon LaFraniere
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