Pete Hegseth
(Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Joe Scarborough says Pete Hegseth’s ‘third-grade routine’ is ‘humiliating’ Trump

MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough has sharply criticized Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, arguing that his increasingly theatrical Pentagon press conferences are damaging rather than helping President Donald Trump, and questioning why the president continues to allow him near a microphone.

The “Morning Joe” host unleashed his criticism following Wednesday’s Pentagon briefing, where Hegseth, the former Fox News personality turned defense chief triumphantly celebrated a ceasefire agreement with Iran that was already showing signs of unraveling even as he spoke.

Scarborough, speaking alongside co-hosts Willie Geist and Mika Brzezinski, was particularly struck by the contrast between Hegseth’s swagger and the more measured tone struck by Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force General Kaine, who stood beside him throughout the briefing.

Pete Hegseth
(Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

“To see Kaine have to stand there while Pete Hegseth is doing all of this, like third-grade chest thumping, like he’s out on the back of the playground and then General Kaine having to say, ‘Well, you know, we’re still basically at war and Americans could still die here,'” Scarborough said. “It’s just, I’m just shocked.”

The veteran broadcaster made clear his disbelief extended beyond Hegseth himself, directing his frustration at Trump for continuing to give the defense secretary a platform. “I really am, that Donald Trump, at this late stage with Pete Hegseth humiliating him and the administration every day with his stupid routine,” he said.

“Third-grade routine I’m just shocked he’s still allowed to go out there in front of a microphone because he just embarrasses himself and he sets Donald Trump and this administration and this country up for continued humiliation at the hands of the Iranians.”

Pete Hegseth
(Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Co-host Willie Geist reinforced the criticism by pointing out the gap between Hegseth’s triumphant framing and the facts on the ground. “He’s talking yesterday about a great military victory, effectively suggesting the war is all but won,” Geist noted. “And because of this great military victory he’s describing, it forced Iran to the negotiating table — which is not quite how it played out.”

The remarks reflect growing concern among media commentators that Hegseth’s combative and boastful public style may be undermining the administration’s credibility on the international stage at a particularly sensitive moment.

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