Pete Hegseth says he ‘didn’t stick around’ to watch second strike on alleged drug boat as Democrats slam administration over attacks – liveNEWS | 03 December 2025From 4h ago 16.05 EST Here's a recap of the day so far In a cabinet meeting that lasted for more than two hours, defense secretary Pete Hegseth gave more details about the decision to re-strike an alleged drug trafficking boat off the coast of Venezuela on 2 September. He said that he “watched that first strike” but ultimately did not “stick around for the hour or two hours” after. “So I moved on to my next meeting,” the defense secretary said. “A couple of hours later, I learned that that commander had made the which he had the complete authority to do.” Hegseth went on to say that decorated US Navy admiral Frank Bradley made the “right call” as he described the unfolding events to reporters.
For his part, Donald Trump said that countries manufacturing and selling drugs to the US are “subject to attack”, adding that strikes wouldn’t be limited to Venezuela. The president also said that the administration is “going to start doing those strikes on land,” after defending his crackdown on alleged narcotics smugglers, which has largely been contained to the sea.
Democrats have come out swinging against the administration over the much-scrutinized second boat strike. Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer called Hegseth “spineless” and “a national embarrassment” and called for the defense secretary to release the full unedited tape of the deadly strikes on the alleged drug boat.
In his ninth cabinet meeting since returning to office, Trump also said that the national guard will soon deploy to New Orleans. He added that the Republican governor (and staunch ally of the president) of Louisiana, Jeff Landry, had called him and asked for help. “We’re going there in a couple of weeks,” Trump said.
The president noted early on in the meeting that he would be announcing his selection for the next chair of the Federal Reserve early next year. He repeated that he talked to treasury secretary Scott Bessent about taking over the Fed but Bessent didn’t want the job. Share
10m ago 19.49 EST Trump claims, once again, to have 'terminated' orders and pardons signed by Biden using autopen Donald Trump once again claimed in a social media post on Tuesday that he has canceled “all Documents, Proclamations, Executive Orders, Memorandums, or Contracts” signed by his predecessor, Joe Biden, using an “autopen” — a mechanical device that uses a robotic arm with a pen attached to replicate a person’s signature. Trump has been making this claim, that he has the power to declare all such documents signed by Biden using the device “null, void, and of no further force or effect” for months, in a series of social media posts laced with legalistic language, despite the fact that the president does not have authority to overturn his predecessor’s pardons, and there is no evidence that Biden did not approve the affixing of his signature to the documents, which does have the force of law, and has been standard practice for decades in administrations including Trump’s own. Trump appears to be aware of the fact that his declarations on social media do not have the force of law, since he first claimed to have overturned Biden’s orders in March, when he wrote, on his social media platform: “The “Pardons” that Sleepy Joe Biden gave to the Unselect Committee of Political Thugs, and many others, are hereby declared VOID, VACANT, AND OF NO FURTHER FORCE OR EFFECT, because of the fact that they were done by Autopen. In other words, Joe Biden did not sign them but, more importantly, he did not know anything about them!” In June, Trump signed a presidential memorandum directing “an investigation into the circumstances surrounding Biden’s purported execution of the numerous executive actions during his final years in office, examining policy documents signed with an autopen, who authorized its use, and the validity of the resulting Presidential policy decisions.” But in an interview with the New York Times in July, Biden insisted that he “made every single one” of the decisions to grant pardons and commutations in his name. “The autopen is, you know, is legal,” Biden added. “As you know, other presidents used it, including Trump.” Last week, Trump declared again that every document signed by Biden “is hereby terminated, and of no further force or effect.” “I am hereby cancelling all Executive Orders, and anything else that was not directly signed by Crooked Joe Biden, because the people who operated the Autopen did so illegally,” Trump wrote on his social media platform on Friday. “Joe Biden was not involved in the Autopen process and, if he says he was, he will be brought up on charges of perjury.” In his latest post, Trump asserted that his own social media posts have the full force of law, while Biden’s presidential orders have none. “Anyone receiving ‘Pardons,’ ‘Commutations,’ or any other Legal Document so signed, please be advised that said Document has been fully and completely terminated, and is of no Legal effect,” the president wrote. The latest Trump post came one day after he posted dozens of false accusations about Democrats on his social media platform. Share
1h ago 19.02 EST The US defense department on Tuesday held its first press briefing since implementing restrictive new policies that prompted dozens of reporters to turn over their press badges in October. In attendance were members of what the Pentagon has described as the “next generation of the Pentagon press corps” including dozens of journalists from ultra conservative outlets as well as former congressman Matt Gaetz and the Trump ally and self-described “white advocate” Laura Loomer. The Washington Post reported that the Pentagon’s press secretary heavily criticized legacy media outlets and called the newspaper the “epitome of fake news” in response to a report that alleged defense secretary Pete Hegseth ordered the military to “kill everybody” during a boat strike in the Caribbean. Share
2h ago 18.17 EST The investigation into Pete Hegseth’s use of messaging app Signal to discuss sensitive information about military operations in Yemen has come to a close, NBC News reported on Tuesday. The inspector general of the Department of Defense began its investigation in April after intelligence on upcoming US airstrikes were shared in a group chat on the app that included Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor of the Atlantic. The inquiry intended to “determine the extent to which the Secretary of Defense and other DoD personnel complied with DoD policies and procedures for the use of a commercial messaging application for official business”, according to a memo from the acting Pentagon inspector general. The defense secretary has said he did not share classified information. Hegseth received a copy of the investigation’s findings, NBC News reported, and the report was expected to be made public as soon as this week. The sources cited by the outlet did not provide information about the conclusions of the investigation, according to NBC News. Share
2h ago 17.58 EST The Trump administration has threatened to withhold Snap food assistance funds to several Democratic-led states if they don’t provide data on recipients to the federal government. Brooke Rollins, the agriculture secretary, said the information, which includes details about immigration status and social security numbers, would “root out” fraud and “make sure that those who really need food stamps are getting them, but also to ensure that the American taxpayer is protected”. Democratic senators have said the administration’s effort to build a database on federal food aid recipients is an “unlawful privacy violation”. More on this development from the Guardian’s Maya Yang: Trump officials threaten to withhold Snap funds from Democratic-led states Read more Share
3h ago 17.04 EST The Associated Press is also reporting that US immigration officials are preparing for a targeted enforcement operation in Minnesota focused on Somali immigrants as Donald Trump becomes increasingly hostile toward the community.
The president on Tuesday called immigrants from the east African country “garbage” and said they “contribute nothing.” The New York Times reported that the Minneapolis-St Paul metro area, which has a large Somali immigrant population, would see increased deportation efforts. A source told the AP that the operation could start in the coming days and that immigration agents would spread across the region, primarily targeting people with final orders of deportation. The Minneapolis mayor, Jacob Frey, said Trump’s rhetoric “violates the moral fabric of what we stand by in this country as Americans”, and that Somali immigrants have started businesses and created jobs and added to the city’s “cultural fabric”. City police officers will not work with federal agents overseeing immigration enforcement, Frey said.
“Targeting Somali people means that due process will be violated, mistakes will be made, and let’s be clear, it means that American citizens will be detained for no other reason than the fact that they look like they are Somali,” he said. Share
4h ago 16.05 EST Here's a recap of the day so far In a cabinet meeting that lasted for more than two hours, defense secretary Pete Hegseth gave more details about the decision to re-strike an alleged drug trafficking boat off the coast of Venezuela on 2 September. He said that he “watched that first strike” but ultimately did not “stick around for the hour or two hours” after. “So I moved on to my next meeting,” the defense secretary said. “A couple of hours later, I learned that that commander had made the which he had the complete authority to do.” Hegseth went on to say that decorated US Navy admiral Frank Bradley made the “right call” as he described the unfolding events to reporters.
For his part, Donald Trump said that countries manufacturing and selling drugs to the US are “subject to attack”, adding that strikes wouldn’t be limited to Venezuela. The president also said that the administration is “going to start doing those strikes on land,” after defending his crackdown on alleged narcotics smugglers, which has largely been contained to the sea.
Democrats have come out swinging against the administration over the much-scrutinized second boat strike. Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer called Hegseth “spineless” and “a national embarrassment” and called for the defense secretary to release the full unedited tape of the deadly strikes on the alleged drug boat.
In his ninth cabinet meeting since returning to office, Trump also said that the national guard will soon deploy to New Orleans. He added that the Republican governor (and staunch ally of the president) of Louisiana, Jeff Landry, had called him and asked for help. “We’re going there in a couple of weeks,” Trump said.
The president noted early on in the meeting that he would be announcing his selection for the next chair of the Federal Reserve early next year. He repeated that he talked to treasury secretary Scott Bessent about taking over the Fed but Bessent didn’t want the job. Share
4h ago 15.44 EST 'I don't want them in our country': Trump ends cabinet meeting with xenophobic rant on Somalis in US As he ended a cabinet meeting that lasted for more than two hours, the president launched into a xenophobic rant against the Somali community in the US. A reminder that he recently ended Temporary Protected Status from Somali nationals living in Minnesota, and has frequently disparaged Ilhan Omar – the Democratic representative who was born in Somalia but has been a US citizen since 2000, after arriving in the country as a refugee. He continued these kinds of vitriolic remarks today. Calling the Minnesota congresswoman “garbage”. “I don’t want them in our country,” Trump said of Somali people living in the US. “Somebody said, ‘oh that’s not politically correct’, I don’t care. I don’t want them in our country. Their country is no good for a reason. Their country stinks, and we don’t want them in our country.” As the president continued denigrating the Somali community, members of his cabinet appeared to bang the table in agreement. “These are people that do nothing but complain,” Trump said. “When they come from hell, and they complain and do nothing but bitch. We don’t want them in our country. Let them go back to where they came from and fix it.” Share
5h ago 15.09 EST 'Real trust funds for every American child': Trump announces new investment accounts for children The president announced the so-called “Trump accounts” program today. These are tax-deferred savings accounts for American children. “Trump accounts will be the first, I guess, you could say, real trust funds for every American child,” the president said, adding that the federal government will also automatically be making a one time seed contribution of $1,000 into accounts for “every newborn US citizen”. Earlier, I reported that billionaires Michael and Susan Dell are contributing about $6.25bn dollars to the program– amounting to $250 per account for children under 10 years old, who live in zip codes where the median household income is $150,000 or less. Share
5h ago 14.55 EST A reminder that this is the video of the first strike on 2 September that defense secretary Pete Hegseth posted to social media. However, this footage doesn’t show the second strike (which reportedly killed two survivors) or has been cut to only show the first. pic.twitter.com/5Ka5KjDYYt — Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) September 2, 2025 Share
5h ago 14.40 EST 'We know the routes they take': Trump threatens land strikes to combat drug cartels During his cabinet meeting today, Donald Trump said that countries manufacturing and selling drugs to the US are “subject to attack”, adding that strikes wouldn’t be limited to Venezuela. Trump also said that the administration is “going to start doing those strikes on land,” after defending his crackdown on alleged narcotics smugglers, which has largely been contained to the sea. “You know, the land is much easier, much easier. And we know the routes they take. We know everything about them. We know where they live. We know where the bad ones live, and we’re going to start that very soon too,” the president said. “When we start that, we’re going to drive those numbers down so low.” Share Updated at 15.11 EST
6h ago 14.17 EST Hegseth says that he watched first strike but 'didn't stick around' for the hours following, as he defends admiral's decision to re-strike alleged drug trafficking boat In today’s cabinet meeting, Pete Hegseth gave more details about the decision to re-strike an alleged drug trafficking boat off the coast of Venezuela on 2 September. He said that he “watched that first strike” but ultimately did not “stick around for the hour or two hours” after. “So I moved on to my next meeting,” the defense secretary said. “A couple of hours later, I learned that that commander had made the [decision], which he had the complete authority to do.” Hegseth went on to back Adm Frank Bradley’s call as he described the unfolding events to reporters. “[Bradley] sunk the boat, sunk the boat and eliminated the threat. And it was the right call. We have his back, and the American people are safer, because Narco terrorists know you can’t bring drugs through the water and eventually on land,” Hegseth added. His retelling today appears at odds with the version of events that he described to his former colleagues at Fox News, a day after the much-scrutinized second strike on 2 September. As my colleague, Robert Mackey, reported, on 3 September the defense secretary said that he watched the operation in real time. “I can tell you that was definitely not artificial intelligence: I watched it live,” Hegseth said in an interview. Share Updated at 17.03 EST
6h ago 13.57 EST Trump says Hegseth 'didn't know' about 'second attack having to do with two people' Taking questions from reporters at his cabinet meeting today, Donald Trump defended his Pentagon chief about reports that Pete Hegseth ordered an US Navy admiral to re-strike an alleged drug boat with two survivors. “Pete didn’t know about second attack having to do with two people,” Trump said. “I can say this. I want those boats taken out.” Share
6h ago 13.51 EST Rubio heaps praise on Trump's foreign policy moves, says he is 'only leader' who can help end war in Ukraine Rounding out comments today, secretary of state Marco Rubio said that Donald Trump is the “only leader in the world” that can help end the war in Ukraine as he praised the president’s foreign policy efforts. “Even as we speak to you now, Steve Witkoff is in Moscow trying to find a way to end this war,” Rubio added, referring to the ongoing summit between Putin and the US delegation that’s been going on for more than two hours. “More people are dying a week in that war than have died in the entirety of the US is involvement in Afghanistan or Iraq,” Rubio said. Share
6h ago 13.33 EST My colleague, Joseph Gedeon, reports that a DC national guard spokesperson confirmed that members supporting Donald Trump’s operation in the nation’s capital “have been armed with their assigned duty weapons since August 2025, in support of civil authorities and at the request of the lead federal agency”. The spokesperson added that “every service member is trained and qualified on their assigned weapon in accordance with Department of War standards”. ShareAuthor: Yohannes Lowe. Robert Mackey. Dani Anguiano. Shrai Popat. Lucy Campbell. Source