“If it’s true that he had another [Signal] chat with his family, about the missions against the Houthis, it’s totally unacceptable,” Bacon added. His comments came in response to a New York Times report detailing the existence of a second Signal thread involving Hegseth and close family members, again without any formal security protocols in place.
While Trump has waved off the reports as “fake news” and attributed them to “disgruntled” former staffers, Bacon made clear he’s not buying the spin.
“I’m not in the White House, and I’m not going to tell the White House how to manage this … but I find it unacceptable, and I wouldn’t tolerate it if I was in charge,” he said.
“Russia and China put up thousands of people to monitor all these phone calls at the very top, and the No. 1 target besides the president … would be the secretary of Defense,” he said. “Russia and China are all over his phone, and for him to be putting secret stuff on his phone is not right. He’s acting like he’s above the law — and that shows an amateur person.”
“It looks like there’s a meltdown going on,” Bacon added. “There’s a lot — a lot — of smoke coming out of the Pentagon, and I got to believe there’s some fire there somewhere.”
Speaking to Axios, Bacon further emphasized the seriousness of the issue: “The military should always pride itself on operational security. If the reports are true, the Secretary of Defense has failed at operational security, and that is unacceptable.”
He also didn’t hold back on the political double standard, saying, “If a Democrat did this we’d be demanding a scalp. I don’t like hypocrisy. We should be Americans first when it comes to security.”
The Nebraska congressman’s remarks drew a clear line in the sand, putting pressure on fellow Republicans to either close ranks around Trump and Hegseth—or acknowledge the gravity of the accusations.