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Timothy Kaine

 
Tim Kaine Image
Title
Senator
Virginia
Party Affiliation
Democrat
2025
2030
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Representative Offices
Address
121 Russell Rd.
Suite
Suite 2
City/State/Zip
Abingdon VA, 24210
Phone
276-525-4790
Fax
276-525-4792
Address
308 Craghead Street
Suite
Suite 102A
City/State/Zip
Danville VA, 24541
Phone
434-792-0976
Fax
434-792-0978
Address
816 William Street
Building
Suite B
Suite
B
City/State/Zip
Fredericksburg VA, 22401
Phone
540-369-7667
Address
9408 Grant Avenue
Suite
Suite 202
City/State/Zip
Manassas VA, 20110
Phone
703-361-3192
Fax
703-361-3198
Address
919 E. Main St.
Suite
Suite 970
City/State/Zip
Richmond VA, 23219
Phone
804-771-2221
Fax
804-771-8313
Address
611 S. Jefferson St.
Suite
Suite 5B
City/State/Zip
Roanoke VA, 24011
Phone
540-682-5693
Fax
540-682-5697
Address
222 Central Park Ave.
Suite
Suite 120
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Virginia Beach VA, 23462
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757-518-1674
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News
03/11/2025 --dailykos
Seventeen Democratic senators joined their Republican colleagues on Monday and voted to confirm Lori Chavez-DeRemer as President Donald Trump’s Secretary of Labor.The Democrats who voted with the administration: Ruben Gallego (Arizona), Mark Kelly (Arizona), Adam Schiff (California), Michael Bennet (Colorado), John Hickenlooper (Colorado), Jon Ossoff (Georgia), Raphael Warnock (Georgia), Gary Peters (Michigan), Elissa Slotkin (Michigan), Amy Klobuchar (Minnesota), Maggie Hassan (New Hampshire), Jeanne Shaheen (New Hampshire), Catherine Cortez Masto (Nevada), Jacky Rosen (Nevada), Sheldon Whitehouse (Rhode Island), Mark Warner (Virginia), and Tim Kaine (Virginia).Twenty-nine Democrats opposed the nomination and only three Republicans voted “no,” meaning that the nomination would have advanced with the 50 Republican “yes” votes even if every Democrat had voted “no.” Instead, the Democratic votes gave the majority party bipartisan cover. As labor secretary, Chavez-DeRemer is expected to carry out Trump’s anti-labor, anti-worker agenda, like the ongoing purge of hundreds of vital government employees under Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency.President Donald TrumpThe vote stands in contrast to the Democratic Party’s repeated claims that they are united in opposition to Trump and his agenda. In fact, at the Senate level, the party has voted again and again to confirm Trump’s nominees and has supported legislative maneuvers allowing votes on nominees that they oppose in a final vote.Despite warning signs like Trump’s past political and policy failures (see: his entire first term) and his racist, destructive rhetoric (see: his entire life), a significant portion of the Democratic Party has empowered him with their Senate votes. Then they eventually regret it. For instance, multiple senators have now gone on the record to say their votes to confirm Secretary of State Marco Rubio (every Senate Democrat voted for him) was a mistake.The cover offered for Chavez-DeRemer is that her record is not as anti-labor as Trump’s, and that she made some statements during her confirmation hearing that offered a moderate stance on labor issues. (However, she does oppose a minimum-wage increase). But like Trump’s other nominees, such as Linda McMahon at the Department of Education and Sean Duffy at the Department of Transportation, Cabinet secretaries are ultimately tasked with executing Trump’s vision.Democrats have faltered in opposition to Trump. Party leadership has chastised a few breakaway members for being strident in speaking out against Trump’s abuses, and have favored a less confrontational approach even as Trump and Musk have thrown out decades of American traditions and values.Trump didn’t need the Democratic Party to install another friendly face in the federal government, but Democrats helped him anyway.Campaign Action
03/10/2025 --bostonherald
Several prominent labor unions, including the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, endorsed Chavez-DeRemer’s nomination.
03/10/2025 --wvnews
The Senate has voted to confirm Lori Chavez-DeRemer as U.S. labor secretary. The Cabinet position puts her in charge of enforcing federally mandated worker rights and protections at a time when the White House is trying to eliminate thousands of...
03/10/2025 --pilotonline
Letter writers discuss USAID Supreme Court ruling, Alzheimer’s disease and dementia research, and federal government cuts by Elon Musk.
03/07/2025 --pilotonline
Letter writers discuss federal government cuts, possible shuttering of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, U.S. Rep. Jen Kiggans, and youth sports.
03/07/2025 --clickondetroit
President Donald Trump is ordering changes to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program that would disqualify workers of nonprofit groups deemed to have engaged in “improper” activities.
03/07/2025 --rollcall
Sen. Christopher S. Murphy, D-Conn., reacts to President Donald Trump’s comments on Ukraine as he speaks with reporters at the Capitol on Feb. 19.
03/06/2025 --pilotonline
Letter writers discuss Texas measles outbreak, Newport News Commonwealth’s Attorney Howard Gwynn, SAVE Act, and White House meeting with Ukrainian president.
03/03/2025 --foxnews
Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, floated several names, including "AmerExit," as he launches a push to withdraw the U.S. from NATO.
03/03/2025 --newsadvance
Roughly one of every 40 Virginians who cast ballots in November’s election did so the day they registered to vote, a huge increase in a relatively new expansion of the ability to vote.
02/14/2025 --foxnews
Linda McMahon's Senate confirmation hearing Thursday featured protests, DEI debates, discussions on trans athletes and scrutiny over DOGE spending cuts.
02/10/2025 --foxnews
Many of President Trump's picks have been confirmed, but some of the most controversial ones have yet to see a Senate vote.
02/07/2025 --morganton
Vought was confirmed on a party-line vote of 53-47 after Democrats warned he was Trump's "most dangerous nominee."
02/06/2025 --rollcall
Sens. Tim Kaine, D-Va., right, and Mark Warner, D-Va., led 22 members of Congress in a letter to acting Health and Human Services Secretary Dorothy Fink citing concerns about the “significant delays” that health centers and other HRSA grantees have been experiencing.
02/03/2025 --pilotonline
Letter writers discuss Something in the Water cancellation, DCA plane crash, DEI initiatives part in American history and Donald Trump's 'lies.'
02/03/2025 --huffpost
The Democratic senator said the president had good reason to promote the baseless theory.
02/03/2025 --newser
Now that his trade war is in full swing, President Trump issued a warning and a vow to Americans Sunday. "WILL THERE BE SOME PAIN? YES, MAYBE (AND MAYBE NOT!)" he posted on his Truth Social network, per the Washington Post and CNN . "BUT WE WILL MAKE AMERICA GREAT...
02/02/2025 --axios
As trade war fears circulate, lawmakers are manning their posts: Democrats are warning prices will skyrocket — while Republicans say the potential discomfort will be worth it in the end.The big picture: Economists fear the across-the-board tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China — and the immediate retaliation that followed — could further stress already strained U.S. households and walk back recent economic gains.Trump's 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico and additional 10% tariffs on China could effectively tax the average U.S. household an extra $830 this year, an analysis from the nonpartisan nonprofit Tax Foundation found.The president conceded in a Sunday Truth Social post that there may be "SOME PAIN" as a result of his tariffs on the U.S.' top three trading partners, but he contended "IT WILL ALL BE WORTH THE PRICE THAT MUST BE PAID."Zoom out: Some of his close allies on Sunday echoed that sentiment.Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on NBC News' "Meet the Press" that if "prices go up, it's because of other people's reactions to America's laws." Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.) characterized Trump's tariffs as a border tool, telling NBC's Kristen Welker they "are meant to bring Canada and Mexico the table for the fentanyl that is streaming into our communities." Almost all of the 21,900 pounds of fentanyl seized last year was at the southwestern border, but 43 pounds was recovered at the northern border, according to Customs and Border Patrol statistics.Vice President JD Vance said before Trump signed off on his anticipated tariffs that "we'll see what happens" regarding retaliation. He argued in an interview aired Sunday on Fox's "Sunday Morning Futures" that the real retaliation was "Donald Trump saying, 'no more.'"Yes, but: Trump's campaign-trail vision for tariffs as a cure-all does not align with the consumer consequences and supply chain disruptions economists and business interest groups foresee.Tariffs can raise revenue for the governments imposing them — but the impact of tariffs can be passed on to consumers through a wide array of everyday products. Most of the country's avocados and beer, for example, come from Mexico. Auto parts, oil and gas are also key resources the U.S. imports from Canada. Former Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.) said on CNN's "State of the Union" said she's concerned that the president doesn't know his "end game" on his tariffs, adding, "If you're going to pick a fight in a bar, maybe you should scope the exits."Between the lines: For months, senators stressed they saw Trump's tariff threats as a negotiating tactic, Axios' Stef W. Kight, Justin Green and Hans Nichols report.Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told "Fox News Sunday" that "these tariffs are designed to get these countries to change their behavior" and that if those changes are made, "I think the tariffs probably go away."Lawmakers who spoke to Axios ahead of Trump's tariff kickoff often pointed to concerns about the taxes on imported goods triggering a rise in inflation, which was a sore spot for Democrats in November.But the tariffs happened — and now Democrats are on offense. Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) characterized the move as the "Donald Trump Super Bowl tax," on CBS News' "Face the Nation," noting key imports from Mexico — like beer, avocados and tomatoes — could carry a larger price tag. His fellow Virginian, Sen. Tim Kaine (D), said Trump's first-term tariffs were "a tax on Virginia consumers," predicting Americans will see "higher prices for energy, higher prices for groceries."Kaine said he was struck by what he saw as the "irony" of Trump's executive order declaring an "energy emergency" followed by 10% tariffs on Canadian energy."The emergency is self-created," Kaine said.Go deeper: Trump builds a tariff wall
02/02/2025 --kron4
Lawmakers in both parties say Congress is gearing up to play an aggressive role in the federal response to this week's deadly collision between a military helicopter and a commercial passenger plane over the Potomac River near Washington. The lawmakers are treading carefully in the early stages of that process, wary of getting ahead of [...]
01/30/2025 --nbcnews
Fear, anger and confusion have swept across federal agencies as workers grapple with executive orders from Trump.
01/30/2025 --bangordailynews
The Republican senator from Maine has been viewed as a key swing vote on several controversial Trump nominees.
01/30/2025 --morganton
Gov. Glenn Youngkin says the plane from Wichita, Kansas appeared to be on a "normal approach" before the collision with a military helicopter near Washington Reagan National Airport that killed 67 people.
01/30/2025 --a12news
Kennedy's confirmation is in the hands of a few Senate Republicans, some of whom have expressed concerns about his views on vaccines.
01/30/2025 --wfaa
Kennedy's confirmation is in the hands of a few Senate Republicans, some of whom have expressed concerns about his views on vaccines.
01/30/2025 --kron4
Senate Republicans advanced the nomination of Russell Vought to lead the White House budget office as Democrats boycotted the meeting to protest the administration's recent efforts to freeze large swaths of federal funding. Republicans on the Senate Budget Committee voted 11-0 to report out Vought's nomination to lead the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), [...]
01/26/2025 --cbsnews
The following is the transcript of an interview with Rep. Jason Crow, Democrat of Colorado, on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" that aired on Jan. 26, 2025.
01/25/2025 --unionleader
Kristi L. Noem, President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Homeland Security, was confirmed by the Senate on Saturday, installing a Trump ally in a key policy role.
01/25/2025 --wsav
The Senate on Saturday approved the nomination of South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), putting her at the center of an administration focused heavily on immigration. The 59-34 vote to confirm Noem capped off a relatively smooth process even as other nominees face more intense scrutiny. Six [...]
01/25/2025 --forbes
Donald Trump's pick for Defense Secretary, faced stiff criticism from Democrats and some Republicans—requiring a tie-breaking vote from JD Vance.
01/25/2025 --forbes
Donald Trump's pick for Defense Secretary, faced stiff criticism from Democrats and some Republicans—requiring a tie-breaking vote from JD Vance.
01/25/2025 --postbulletin
As a longtime English language teacher of adult learners and Southeast Minnesota resident, I’m dismayed that the flawed Laken Riley Act has advanced in the House and Senate at a fast pace. This act requires the mandatory detention of undocumented immigrants charged with such nonviolent crimes as shoplifting.
01/25/2025 --rollcall
Kristi Noem, the next Homeland Security secretary, testifies during her Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee confirmation hearing on Jan. 17.
01/22/2025 --westernjournal
Virginia Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine isn’t exactly having a good run during the Senate confirmation hearings for President Donald Trump’s nominees. Fresh off his unfortunate starring role in the Pete [...]The post Watch: Elise Stefanik Makes Tim Kaine Look Silly When He Pretends Democrats Care About Border Security appeared first on The Western Journal.
01/22/2025 --starexponent
A Marine veteran, John Walter Clark IV, 36, was arrested and taken into custody on Aug. 19, 2024, in a tactical raid by law enforcement at his home.
01/21/2025 --kron4
Senate Democrats are sounding the alarm over a sworn affidavit from the ex-sister-in-law of Defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth that accuses him of being abusive toward his second wife. The document emerged Tuesday, one day after the Senate Armed Services Committee advanced Hegseth’s nomination on a party-line vote and as Senate Republicans push to complete [...]
01/21/2025 --forbes
Donald Trump's pick for Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, is facing stiff criticism from Democrats—but most Republicans back him.
01/17/2025 --abcnews
Guest lineups for the Sunday news shows
01/17/2025 --nbcnews
Congressional leaders who championed the TikTok bill last year in the U.S. now want to delay the ban on the popular app from going into effect.
01/14/2025 --nbcnews
Pete Hegseth, Trump's defense pick, was met with a friendly reception by Senate Republicans at his Tuesday hearing before the Armed Services Committee.
01/14/2025 --axios
Pete Hegseth, President-elect Trump's pick for secretary of Defense, dodged several questions during his often contentious Senate confirmation hearing Tuesday.The big picture: Republicans' narrow Senate majority means they can only lose a handful of votes, and Democrats used the hearing to air Hegseth's allegations of sexual misconduct, financial mismanagement and excessive drinking and question how far he would go on Trump's behalf.The former Fox News host and U.S. Army veteran, who some national security officials have cautioned may not have enough experience, traversed a tumultuous path to Tuesday's hearing. He's blamed a "smear campaign" for threatening to derail his nomination but has solidified support from key members of the GOP.Here are some of the questions Hegseth dodged during his hearing:Will he resign if he drinks?Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) pressed Hegseth on accusations of excessive drinking, pointing to his vow not drink on the job if confirmed. He said he "absolutely" made that promise to Republican lawmakers.Yes, but: Hegseth did not answer whether he would resign if he does drink, instead saying, "I've made this commitment on behalf of the men and women I'm serving because it's the most important deployment of my life."Should domestic violence be disqualifying?As part of a fiery exchange with Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Hegseth would not say whether violence against a spouse should be disqualifying for a secretary of Defense.He repeatedly told Kaine he "absolutely" had never committed physical violence against any of his three wives.He called Kaine's question "a hypothetical."Would he use the military against Americans?Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) pressed Hegseth on whether he'd support using the U.S. military against American citizens — and Hegseth's answer seemed inconclusive."If Donald Trump asked you to use the 82nd Airborne in law enforcement roles in Washington, D.C., would you ... convince him otherwise?" she asked."I'm not going to get ahead of conversations I would have with the president. However, there are laws and processes inside our Constitution that would be followed," Hegseth replied.Zoom out: As part of Hirono's questioning, Hegseth did not directly answer whether he'd approve of shooting protesters in the legs, in reference to the suggestion former defense secretary Mark Esper said Trump gave him in 2020."Senator, I was in the Washington, D.C., National Guard unit that was in Lafayette Square during those events," Hegseth replied, "holding a riot shield on behalf of my country."Would he seize Greenland by force?Hegseth sidestepped another inquiry from Hirono, who asked whether he would comply with an order to claim Greenland or the Panama Canal by force, as Trump has threatened.What he's saying: Hegseth applauded Trump for "never strategically tipping his hand" in response to Hirono's question, adding he would not provide details in "this public forum.""That sounds to me like that you would contemplate carrying out such an order to basically invade Greenland and take over the Panama Canal," Hirono replied.Should the U.S. follow the Geneva Conventions?Hegseth did not appear to commit to upholding the laws of combat governed by the Geneva Conventions during questioning from Sen. Angus King (I-Maine).What he's saying: "We have laws on the books from the Geneva Conventions into the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and then underneath that, you have layers in which standard or temporary rules of engagement are put into place," Hegseth said. "We fight enemies ... that play by no rules."Pressed by King, he said, "We don't need burdensome rules of engagement that make it impossible for us to win these wars."Zoom in: Asked if the conventions' ban on torturing prisoners still applies, Hegseth called the conventions "incredibly important" but said how wars are fought has evolved."Your position is torture is OK, is that correct?" King asked.Hegseth contended that was not what he said, adding, "I've never been party to torture."Later, when pressed on past comments he made seemingly endorsing waterboarding, Hegseth responded, "The law of the land is that waterboarding is not legal."Go deeper: Scoop: Hegseth opening statement pledges Pentagon "warrior ethos"
01/14/2025 --foxnews
SecDef nominee Pete Hegseth and Dem. Sen. Tim Kaine engaged in a tense back and forth about Hegseth's marital history and Hegseth's young daughter was mentioned.
01/14/2025 --foxnews
Pete Hegseth, President-elect Trump's choice to head up the Pentagon, faced a Senate confirmation grilling with the Armed Services Committee.
01/14/2025 --dailykos
Democrats hammered defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth at his confirmation hearing on Tuesday, slamming the Fox News host for his sexist views on women in combat, his alleged sexual impropriety, his alleged drinking on the job, and his bad managerial skills that led to his exit from two veterans charities.Their tough questioning came as Republicans handled Hegseth with kid gloves, protecting him from accountability by limiting questions from senators and by allowing an exceedingly incomplete FBI report to stand as sufficient for his confirmation.Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia asked some of the toughest questions of Hegseth during Tuesday’s hearing.Kaine questioned Hegseth about his alleged infidelity, accusation of sexual assault, allegations from colleagues that Hegseth drank on the job, and the fact that Hegseth withheld information about these accusations from Donald Trump's team during the interview process for the role.When Kaine asked Hegseth whether it's disqualifying to show up drunk at work, Hegseth didn't answer and instead falsely claimed those reports came from anonymous sources. In fact, one of the people who accused Hegseth of workplace impropriety was Jessie Jane Duff, a Marine veteran and former Trump campaign official who in 2016 sought to get Hegseth removed as head of the Concerned Veterans of America group, CBS News reported.When Hegseth told Kaine he is "an open book," Kaine scoffed, noting that Hegseth's accusers are under "multiple nondisclosure and confidentiality agreements" that are "tying the hands of many people who would like to comment to us."Kaine also brought up that Hegseth has defied oaths he's taken in the past, including to be faithful to his wives—of which Hegseth has had three. "You had just fathered a child two months before by a woman that was not your wife. I am shocked that you would stand here and say you're completely cleared. Can you so casually cheat on a second wife and cheat on the mother of a child that had been born two months before? And you tell us you were completely cleared?" Kaine said.Kaine refused to accept Hegseth's excuse that the allegations against him shouldn't be believed because they were made anonymously, saying that among the people who made the allegations against Hegseth was his own mother.“You claimed 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,” Kaine said, basically accusing Hegseth of lying.xHegseth: Anonymous false chargesKaine: They’re not anonymous.. We have seen records with names attached to all of these including your own mother pic.twitter.com/cfzrEcH0AD— Acyn (@Acyn) January 14, 2025Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona built on that line of questioning, saying Hegseth’s excuses about his drinking and sexual misconduct do not add up"Which is it—have you overcome personal issues, or are you the target of a smear campaign? It can't be both. It's clear to me that you're not being honest with us or the American people because you know the truth would disqualify you from getting the job,” Kelly said. “And just as concerning as each of these specific disqualifying accusations are, what concerns me just as much is the idea of having a secretary of defense who is not transparent.”Meanwhile, Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, a military veteran who lost both of her legs in combat in Iraq, quizzed Hegseth on basic information about the military, and Hegseth could not answer.Duckworth asked him to name one member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the relationship the United States has with them. Hegseth couldn’t answer."I suggest you do a little homework," Duckworth told Hegseth, later adding “You’re not qualified, Mr. Hegseth.”xYIKES! Duckworth asks Hegseth to name a country that's in ASEAN. He names three -- none of which are in ASEAN."I suggest you do a little homework," she says. pic.twitter.com/Hfxb6iPpNL— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) January 14, 2025Sen. Gary Peters, Democrat of Michigan, brought up the fact that Hegseth has no experience managing massive organizations like the Pentagon, and that confirming him would be akin to lowering the standards for the Department of Defense that Hegseth has railed against."You talk about standards, you talk ... that we have a problem of standards in the DOD, and that we have to raise standards for the men and women who serve. Do you think that the way to raise the minimum standards of the people who serve us is to lower the standards for the secretary of defense, that we have someone who has never managed an organization more than 100 people?" Peters said. xPeters: You talk about standards, you talk about raising, or that we have a problem of standards in the DOD, and we have to raise standards for the men and women who serve. Do you think that the way to raise the minimum standards of the people who serve us is to lower the... pic.twitter.com/zSZFxG6RBt— Acyn (@Acyn) January 14, 2025Democratic Sens. Jeanne Shaheen and Elizabeth Warren brought up Hegseth's past misogynistic comments. In particular, on a Nov. 7 podcast, he said, “I’m straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles.” However, since being nominated by Trump, he has had a magical change in point of view, saying that women are qualified for combat.“What extraordinary event happened in that 32-day period that made you change the core values you had expressed for the preceding 12 years?” Warren said.x.@ewarren to Hegseth: You've said ‘I'm straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles’ and ‘Women are inferior soldiers.’ What extraordinary event happened in a 32-day period that made you change your values you had expressed for the preceding 12 years? pic.twitter.com/l3ofPZ4NFc— FactPost (@factpostnews) January 14, 2025But none of Hegseth’s past comments or behavior seemed to concern the Republicans on the panel, who asked softball questions and even defended Hegseth’s vile conduct.Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma went as far as saying that because some members of the Senate drink before casting votes or have cheated on wives, that it’s okay that Hegseth has done the same."Sen. Kaine—or I guess I better use ‘the senator from Virginia’—starts bringing up the fact that 'What if you showed up drunk to your job?' How many senators have shown up drunk to vote at night? Have any of you guys asked them to step down and resign from your job?” Mullin said. “And then how many senators you know have gotten a divorce for cheating on their wives? Did you ask them to step down? No."The problem with Mullin’s logic is obvious: Just because some senators have allegedly acted that way doesn’t render Hegseth’s alleged actions meaningless. Additionally, those lawmakers weren’t nominated to be secretary of defense.xMarkwayne Mullin: "Senator Kaine, or I guess I better use the senator from Virginia, starts bringing up the fact that 'what if you showed up drunk to your job?' How many senators have shown up drunk to vote at night? ... how many senators have gotten a divorce for cheating?" pic.twitter.com/4ErJAm2byz— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) January 14, 2025Ultimately, Democrats laid bare how unqualified Hegseth is to lead the Pentagon. But Republicans are set to confirm Hegseth anyway, kowtowing to Trump’s demand that they all roll over and accept his deeply unprepared and corrupt nominees. Godspeed to the Pentagon with this clown at the helm.Thank you to the Daily Kos community who continues to fight so hard with Daily Kos. Your reader support means everything. We will continue to have you covered and keep you informed, so please donate just $3 to help support the work we do.
01/14/2025 --huffpost
Sen. Tim Kaine grilled Trump's nominee over his claims of being "completely cleared" of any wrongdoing amid concerning allegations against him.
01/14/2025 --huffpost
Hegseth declined to commit to a Democratic senator that he would resign as Secretary of Defense if he drinks on the job.
 
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