As President Donald Trump wages a military campaign against Iran, key Democrats on Capitol Hill are growing increasingly frustrated with what the administration is sharing with them.
Or, more precisely, what the administration isn’t sharing.
It’s a concern that predates the Iran conflict — and, to some extent, the current White House. But when lawmakers have gathered recently behind closed doors to hear from administration officials about ongoing operations, Democrats say they’ve been struck by the dearth of new information they’re receiving.
“I don’t think you, at the end, get really anything more in these classified briefings with the Trump administration than you would by watching MS NOW or CNN,” said Rep. Joseph Morelle, D-N.Y., who serves on the House Appropriations subcommittee that deals with defense spending.
“There’s no sort of real in-depth analysis or information that you couldn’t get by reading the paper or looking at the news,” he said.
Ahead of the latest round of closed-door briefings last week, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., predicted the gathering wouldn’t be especially illuminating. He told reporters that White House officials often filibuster in private and then publicly claim they’ve fulfilled their obligation to keep Congress informed.
“The administration comes in,” Kaine said. “They bring a lot of briefers. They say they’re going to be there for an hour. The briefers take up 45 minutes or so, and then 100 senators who all have questions, just a few of them get their questions answered.”
“Then they walk out and say, ‘See? We’ve been keeping Congress informed,’” Kaine said.
Kaine made those comments before the White House visited Capitol Hill last week. But his description appeared to match the experience many lawmakers had after officials like Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, briefed members on Tuesday.
“Virtually nothing in these stupid briefings is actually classified,” Rep. Jared Huffman, D-Calif., told MS NOW.
Huffman said recent briefings on both Venezuela and Iran have followed a familiar pattern.
“Gen. Caine and Hegseth try to dazzle us with how amazing our military is. The Republicans all clap. And then Rubio does a bunch of fast talk,” Huffman said.
He added that there’s “virtually no detail” and rarely enough time for questions. And because Republicans ask roughly half the questions, he said, “50% of the questions are just echo chamber cheerleading.”
“It’s really quite useless,” Huffman said.
“They tell you everything you’ve already read in the media, but they dramatize it as ‘this is all very hush-hush classified,’” he continued.
Asked what genuinely classified information is shared, Huffman said briefers sometimes include “a nugget or two that isn’t in the media,” but that it’s typically related to specific military equipment used in an operation.
“It’s all part of the show. It’s not anything that would really inform Congress’ judgment into these matters,” he said, characterizing the briefings as filibustering.
But Rep. Pat Ryan, D-N.Y., an Iraq war veteran, said describing the Trump administration briefers as “filibustering” would be “generous.”
Ryan accused the administration officials of trying to “overwhelm” lawmakers with “minutia.”
“Now two wars — Venezuela and this — I’ve stood up, waited in line, and never been able to ask a single question,” Ryan told MS NOW. “They just run out the clock.”
Ryan also accused Rubio of previously lying to him and other lawmakers in a classified setting, suggesting the secretary misled members about the administration’s plans for regime change in Venezuela.
Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y. — the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee — also agreed that the administration is far from forthcoming.
“They do filibustering in the beginning. They tell you, right now, they’re going to do just an hour,” Meeks said, adding that they then try to “get out and not answer questions.”
Before administration officials talked during this most recent briefing, Meeks actually told them he didn’t want them to filibuster, according to a lawmaker who was present.
It seems the administration officials didn’t heed that request.
Meeks, who has served in Congress since 1998, told MS NOW that the last administration led by a Republican, George W. Bush, behaved “completely different” and was more “open.”
“In other administrations, at the very least, you have hearings in committees, both classified and unclassified,” Meeks said. “There was times I wanted a briefer — someone from the State Department — and I was prepared to go to their office. They said, ‘Oh no, Congressman, we’ll come to you.’”









