WASHINGTON — In a week already packed with political landmines, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has found himself at the center of a fresh Washington firestorm — this time over women’s right to vote.

Under Pete Hegseth, Chaos Prevails at the Pentagon - The New York Times

The uproar began when Hegseth reposted a video featuring pastors openly calling for the repeal of the 19th Amendment — the constitutional guarantee that gave women the vote in 1920.

The video, which originally aired on CNN, showed interviews with Christian Nationalist Pastor Doug Wilson of Christ Church, alongside several other pastors in the same religious network. One of them, Pastor Toby Sumpter, bluntly stated that families should vote as a single unit — with the man casting the ballot after consulting his household. Another pastor went further, declaring he would support repealing the 19th Amendment entirely.

Hegseth shared the clip with the caption: “All of Christ for All of Life.” The post immediately triggered a wave of outrage — not just from political opponents, but from senior defense officials who now had to clarify whether the Pentagon chief actually believes women should lose the vote.


Pentagon Damage Control

Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson faced a barrage of questions Thursday.

“Of course the Secretary thinks that women should have the right to vote,” Wilson told reporters, sounding both firm and weary. But she refused to dissect Hegseth’s intentions behind the repost.

“I’m not going to litigate every single aspect of what he may or may not believe in a certain video,” she said, visibly bracing for more follow-ups.

When pressed, Wilson acknowledged that Hegseth “very much appreciates many of Mr. Wilson’s writings and teachings” — a statement that only fueled speculation about where the secretary personally stands.


A Pattern of Controversy

Pete Hegseth under siege as Pentagon plunges into disarray

For critics, this incident is just the latest in a string of moves they say reveal Hegseth’s hostility toward women in uniform. Since taking office, the secretary has launched what he calls a purge of “wokeness” from the military — a campaign that has seen multiple high-ranking women removed from key posts.

The list is already long:

Vice Adm. Yvette Davids, the first woman to lead the U.S. Naval Academy, was ousted before completing her expected three-year term.

Adm. Linda Fagan, the first woman to head the U.S. Coast Guard, was removed by Homeland Security.

Vice Adm. Shoshana Chatfield, America’s military representative to NATO, was fired earlier this year.

Adm. Lisa Franchetti, the first woman to serve as the U.S. Navy’s top officer, was also shown the door.

Hegseth has defended these removals as necessary to restore “combat readiness” and to eliminate senior leaders “involved in any of the DEI woke s—.”


The Church Connection

Hegseth attends a church affiliated with the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches — a network co-founded by Pastor Doug Wilson, the very man featured in the controversial CNN segment.

While there’s no public record of Hegseth personally endorsing the repeal of women’s voting rights, his choice to amplify the video — without clarification — has given ammunition to those accusing him of flirting with extremist ideas.


Political Fallout

Pete Hegseth's Latest Battle: Infighting Inside the Pentagon - WSJ

Capitol Hill reaction was swift. Democratic lawmakers demanded an explanation, with some calling for hearings on whether the defense secretary’s personal views on women’s rights could influence Pentagon policy.

“It’s 2025, not 1825,” one senator fumed. “The fact that we even have to ask if the Secretary of Defense supports women voting is absurd — and alarming.”

Republican allies largely stayed silent, though a few dismissed the outrage as “manufactured drama” meant to distract from Hegseth’s military reforms.


The Bigger Picture

The controversy comes at a precarious moment for the Pentagon, which is still battling recruitment challenges and public trust issues after years of political polarization.

For Hegseth, the optics are particularly damaging: the image of the nation’s top defense official reposting anti–women’s suffrage rhetoric — no matter the context — is already being weaponized by opponents and late-night hosts alike.

Social media is flooded with split-screen memes of Hegseth alongside 1920s suffragists, with captions like: “She fought for her right to vote. He hit retweet.”


What Happens Next

The Pentagon has made it clear it won’t be issuing further clarifications beyond Wilson’s statement. Hegseth himself has not commented publicly since the uproar began.

Whether this controversy fades or deepens may depend on whether more examples emerge of the secretary aligning — even indirectly — with positions seen as hostile to women’s rights.

For now, Washington insiders are bracing for the next headline in what’s already become a turbulent tenure for Pete Hegseth — one in which the battles inside the Beltway may be every bit as fierce as those the military fights overseas.