Some Democrats are accusing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth of curtailing Congress’s oversight role with his recent order ...
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered that Pentagon personnel be required to coordinate all interactions with Congress ...
The New Republic on MSNOpinion
Pete Hegseth’s New Move Will Make It Harder for Congress to Stop Him
Using the Trump administration’s unofficial moniker for the department, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Deputy Defense ...
The Defense Department is significantly changing its policy of interacting with Congress, according to a new, five-page memo ...
5don MSN
Hegseth orders prior approval for ‘all interactions’ between military officials and Congress
The Pentagon is barring nearly all Defense Department personnel, including military commanders, from talking to Congress or state lawmakers unless they have received prior approval from the agency’s ...
Most Pentagon personnel will need approval from the legislative affairs office before talking to members of Congress or state ...
12don MSN
Pentagon Reporters Lament Losing Access as Hegseth Standoff Escalates: ‘A Dark Day for Free Press’
On social media, journalists shared recollections and memorabilia from their time working inside the Pentagon.
Leaders at the Pentagon have significantly altered how military officials will speak with Congress after a pair of new memos ...
DOD communication with Congress covered by the memo includes congressional reporting, information requests, technical support and legislative correspondence. DOD Legislative Agend ...
A plane carrying DOD Secretary Pete Hegseth back to the United States from a NATO meeting in Brussels, Belgium had to make an ...
The New Republic on MSNOpinion
Hegseth Announces New Pentagon Press Corps Full of Right-Wing Grifters
The defense secretary has successfully reshaped the Pentagon press corps to include some of the furthest-right “reporters.” ...
What does the Pentagon's restrictive new press policy mean for coverage of military affairs? NPR's Michel Martin asks longtime journalist and former Defense Department spokesperson Pete Williams.
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