Sen. Mark Kelly aptly exposes Pete Hegseth's fatal flaw as Defense secretary. It's the same one found in Kelly's Republican colleagues.
The Arizona senator questioned Department of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth about his history of getting blitzed off his ass.
Pete Hegseth at his confirmation hearing was asked by Sen. Mark Kelly if it was true or false that in 2014 he was drunk in public in Cleveland?
Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Arizona) asked Pete Hegseth during his Senate confirmation hearing for the secretary of defense post about multiple instances involving his apparent drunken conduct during work functions.
Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's embattled pick for defense secretary, faced tough questions from senators during his confirmation hearing.
KELLY: All right. She's obnoxious. It was a clever answer in the moment, but that would have been great. That would have been groundbreaking and game changing. All these secretaries of defense, almost all of them, go into the defense industry. And that's how a lot of corruption happens. That is one of the swampiest things out there.
The Senate Armed Forces Committee held a confirmation hearing Tuesday for Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for defense secretary. The former Fox News host faced harsh questioning from Democrats.
Megyn Kelly opens the show live from Washington, D.C. after attending Pete Hegseth's confirmation hearing by discussing what she observed, why she thinks Hegseth will be confirmed easily, the terrible performance by Democratic women,
Pete Hegseth, Donald Trump's pick for secretary of Defense, sat for a brutal four-hour confirmation hearing that was absolutely unhinged TV.
CNN's political commentators Scott Jennings and Karen Finney join CNN's Dana Bash to give their takeaways of Pete Hegseth's Senate confirmation hearing. DANA BASH: Pete Hegseth, Donald Trump's pick to run the Department of Defense,
During the confirmation hearing for Pete Hegseth this week, Senator Mark Kelly got into a tense exchange with Hegseth over his alleged past misconducts, which Hegseth dismissed as "anonymous smears."