The secretary didnt just make a bogus claim about the Obama era, he also twice asserted very specific nonsense about the Biden era.
Pressed on whether heâd deploy troops to local voting precincts, Hegseth deflected and pushed a false claim â while under oath â about the Biden era.
A week later, maybe he could give us a straight answer about the underlying question?
www.ms.now/rachel-maddo...
— Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2026-05-05T14:19:40.302Z
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/in-sworn-testimony-hegseth-pushed-false-claim-about-troops-deployed-to-voting-precincts
The defense secretary was also asked whether he would be willing to deploy U.S. troops to local voting precincts ahead of this years midterm elections. Instead of answering the question directly, Hegseth again looked backward, in keeping with his borderline-creepy fixation on Joe Biden.
I will note that in 2024, troops were that was Joe Biden, by the way, Joe Biden were deployed to polling locations in 15 states, Hegseth said in sworn testimony to the House Armed Services Committee. For good measure, he repeated,
2024 Joe Biden troops deployed to polling locations in 15 states. Explain that one to me.
A day later, the secretary made the same claim in nearly identical wording during sworn testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Readers can probably guess where this is headed. CNN reported:
All of the National Guard activations connected to the 2024 election were ordered by state governors, not by Biden. And all 12 of the states that responded to CNNs requests for information said that none of their troops were deployed to polling locations.
Rather, the states said their Guard personnel worked behind the scenes at other locations helping with election cybersecurity or serving as internal liaisons or that their state Guard was not actually activated for the election after all.
Put another way, Hegseth didnt merely push a false claim about the Obama era, he also twice pushed a very specific false claim about the Biden era about which he got literally every detail wrong.
I will leave it to legal experts to assess whether the secretary crossed any lines by saying untrue things to Congress while under oath, but at this point, there
are two questions the secretary and the Pentagon really ought to answer: 1) How and why did Hegseth prepare bogus talking points for sworn congressional testimony; and 2) Can Hegseth maybe now answer truthfully and specifically about his possible plans for the 2026 midterm elections?