Featured

Lawmakers Differ Over Press Responsibility in ‘Signalgate’

Every second administration has a controversy that looms over it, and for the Trump Administration, it could be “Signalgate.” As the controversy casts a shadow over the incumbent presidency, lawmakers on Capitol Hill weighed in on whether journalists have an ethical responsibility to withhold classified information when it could pose a threat to national security.

The debate centers on the tension between press freedom and national security obligations, and in an exclusive interview with Texas Politics, members of Congress offered differing views on how journalists should respond to the tension.

Texas Rep. Jake Ellzey (R), a former Navy pilot, emphasized the duty that Americans have, including journalists, to protect sensitive information.

“If they are aware of its classification and its sensitivity to the national security of the United States — most importantly the American lives and service members’ lives — I think becoming aware of it and reporting it to the authorities is a patriotic duty,” he said. “I think there’s a responsibility for any American citizen to not release that into the public domain.”

Florida Rep. Aaron Bean (R), co-Chair of the DOGE Caucus, offered a succinct but telling remark on the issue, commenting, “I think if you love America, you certainly put America First.”

In contrast, Florida Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D) shared a more nuanced response, pointing to the need for truth when government officials mislead the public.

“Obviously we gotta be able to make sure that national secrets and classified information doesn’t get out into the domain,” he commented. “But if we have people within the administration… saying ‘oh, that’s not true,’ or ‘it’s inaccurate,’… then I think there’s an obligation to come out to prove that it did happen.”

Rep. Moskowitz added that the release of the controversial information was ultimately prompted by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s assurance that the material in question was not classified.

“Hopefully next time… if someone makes a mistake, they then don’t come out and basically force the release of the information,” he concluded.

Daniel Molina

Daniel Molina is a managing editor and legislative correspondent with a decade of experience covering the evolving political landscape of the American South and Southwest.

Recent Posts

Ken Paxton Dismisses John Cornyn's Electability Claim, Predicts Texas Will Reject James Talarico

Attorney General Ken Paxton (R-TX) isn't playing defense. With less than a week until the…

6 minutes ago

House Backs ‘Parental Rights’ Bill on Gender Identity Disclosure

The House of Representatives voted 217–198 along party lines to pass a bill denying federal…

20 minutes ago

LONESTAR — 5.21.2026 — Chip Roy Tackles Foreign Adversaries Purchasing U.S. Homes — Republicans Worry Over Trump Endorsing Paxton — and More...

Chip Roy Seeks to Ban Foreign Adversaries from Purchasing U.S. Homes Congressman Chip Roy (R)…

35 minutes ago

Overnight Storms Across Texas Leave Thousands of Customers Across Texas Without Power

Overnight storms across Texas left thousands of customers across Texas without power Wednesday morning. Severe…

19 hours ago

Randy Weber's Warning That Birthright Citizenship Is Broken

Representative Randy Weber (R-TX) has been vocal in his opposition to birthright citizenship, calling it…

20 hours ago

TSA Worked Without Pay as Shutdown Fallout Returns to Capitol Hill

At a House committee hearing earlier today in Washington, D.C., members revisited the impacts of…

20 hours ago