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Mar 05, 2026

Hegseth Directs Army Secretary To Fire Public Affairs Chief

Hegseth Directs Army Secretary To Fire Public Affairs Chief

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has directed Army Secretary Dan Driscoll to remove Col. Dave Butler from his position as chief of Army public affairs and senior adviser to the Army secretary, according to a report by Fox News.

Driscoll is currently in Geneva as part of a U.S. negotiating team working on efforts related to the war in Ukraine, Fox News reported.

Butler previously served as head of public affairs for the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the tenure of Army Gen. Mark Milley as chairman. He had been slated for promotion to brigadier general and appeared for two consecutive years on an Army list of 34 officers selected for advancement.

The promotion list has reportedly been delayed for nearly four months after Hegseth raised concerns about several officers included by the Army selection board. Under federal law, the defense secretary cannot unilaterally remove individual names from a promotion list once it has been submitted.

According to an Army official cited in the report, Butler offered to voluntarily withdraw his name from consideration in an effort to allow the broader list of promotions to move forward.

Driscoll, an Army veteran and a close ally of Vice President JD Vance—who attended Yale Law School with Vance—had resisted Hegseth’s ongoing pressure to fire Butler for months due to Butler’s significant contributions to the transformation of the Army.

“We greatly appreciate COL Dave Butler’s lifetime of service in America’s Army and to our nation,” Driscoll said in a statement. “Dave has been an integral part of the Army’s transformation efforts and I sincerely wish him tremendous success in his upcoming retirement after 28 years of service.” 

Butler accompanied Driscoll to Ukraine to help start peace negotiations in November 2025, Fox stated, adding that Hegseth’s firing demand came late last week.

In 2025, Hegseth took charge at the Pentagon and quickly began to dismiss high-ranking officers or push them into early retirement, often without providing reasons or justifications. Among those affected were Adm. Lisa Franchetti, then chief of naval operations; Gen. CQ Brown, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Gen. James Mingus, who held the position of vice chief of the Army; Gen. Douglas A. Sims, director of the Joint Staff; Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin; Gen. James Slife, vice chief of the Air Force; and Gen. Timothy Haugh, director of the National Security Agency, among others.

Butler, recognized as one of the Army’s top communicators, played a vital role alongside elite special operations units during numerous missions overseas while attached to the Army’s Delta Force from 2010 to 2014. 

From 2015 to 2018, he served as the public affairs officer for Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. During this time, he worked closely with Gen. Scott Miller when Miller was in command of JSOC from 2016 to 2018.

Following Miller’s request, Butler then deployed to Afghanistan when Miller took command there from 2018 to 2019.

Throughout this period, he acted as the chief spokesman and director of communications for all U.S. and NATO forces while Miller held the position of top four-star general in Afghanistan, Fox reported.

A former four-star officer who once commanded U.S. Special Operations said Butler was “the consummate professional, the most competent Public Affairs officer I have ever worked with and a gifted practitioner of strategic communications.”

In 2025, as part of the Army’s 250th birthday celebrations, President Donald Trump acknowledged Butler specifically for his efforts in assisting the Army chief with organizing the parade in Washington, D.C.

In December, a federal appeals court sided with Hegseth and the Trump administration over its reimposed policy barring transgender Americans from serving in the U.S. military. At the same time, the appeals panel chided the lower federal district court judge appointed by Joe Biden over her ruling against the Pentagon.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer BETRAYED - Democrats Break Ranks, Hop On the Trump Train In Humiliating Defeat


WASHINGTON, D.C. — The "Democrat Resistance" in the United States Senate has officially collapsed. In a humiliating blow to Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), the united front of the radical left shattered late Sunday night as key lawmakers abandoned the party's obstructionist strategy to side with President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD).

After seven days of a manufactured crisis that threatened the paychecks of federal employees and the stability of the economy, Senators John Fetterman (D-PA)Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), and Angus King (I-ME) officially "hopped on the Trump train." Their defections provided the pivotal votes needed to pass a common-sense Republican spending proposal and reopen the government on Trump's terms.


The Fetterman Revolt: "America Loses"

The defection of Senator John Fetterman served as the death knell for Schumer’s shutdown strategy. Fetterman, who has increasingly positioned himself against "political games," delivered a brutal reality check to the DNC leadership.

  • Fetterman’s Stand: "Shutting our government down isn’t a ‘game.’ America loses," Fetterman declared on social media, pinning the blame squarely on party leaders who prioritized "bloated subsidies" over the country.

  • Cortez Masto’s Shift: Facing a massive backlash in Nevada, Senator Cortez Masto abandoned the radical left's "health care crisis" narrative, claiming she could no longer support a shutdown that was hurting her constituents—despite initially voting to sustain it.

  • Angus King’s Admission: The Maine Independent admitted that siding with the GOP was one of the "most difficult votes" of his career, conceding that the momentum of the America First movement was simply too strong to ignore.

Trump Drops the Hammer: The Layoff Ultimatum

While Schumer attempted to use the shutdown to extort the American taxpayer, President Trump took decisive action from the Oval Office. During a high-profile meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Trump issued a massive ultimatum: if the government remained closed, his administration would execute mass layoffs across the federal bureaucracy.

  • The "Swamp" on Notice: "Americans are going to find out very soon which programs are on the chopping block," Trump declared. "We are going to have a lot closer to a balanced budget."

  • No More Bluffing: Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt reaffirmed that the President was prepared to act, stating that Trump is finally "correcting decades of cowardice" in Washington.

The Financial Revolution of 2026

With the government set to reopen, the Trump administration is moving forward with its "America First" financial revolution. The collapse of Schumer’s firewall confirms that the GOP now holds the leverage to implement structural reforms, deregulation, and massive spending cuts without the threat of a Democrat-led shutdown.

“The era of using the government to tarnish the American taxpayer is over,” a senior White House official said. “President Trump has proven once again that he will never back down, and the deep state's grip is finally loosening.”


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Looking Ahead to the Midterms

The defections of Fetterman, Cortez Masto, and King have created a civil war within the Democrat Party just months before the 2026 Midterm elections. As the radical left scrambles for a new narrative, the Republican Party enters the spring season with total legislative momentum.

With 5% economic growth and a leaner government on the horizon, the Trump administration is proving that the America First mandate is not just a slogan—it is the new reality of Washington power.

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