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Federal Judge Stuns Trump Pentagon Over Mark Kelly — “This Has NEVER Been Approved by the Supreme Court” 👉 Read what the court just said and why it could blow up the case
A FEDERAL JUDGE JUST TOLD THE TRUMP PENTAGON what it’s trying to do to Mark Kelly has never been approved by the Supreme Court — not once.
A federal judge is openly questioning whether the Trump administration is trying to create brand-new law to punish political speech.
This week, Mark Kelly appeared in federal court to block the Pentagon from censuring him, demoting his retired military rank, and cutting his retirement pay — all over a short video urging service members to refuse unlawful orders and uphold the Constitution.
U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, a Republican appointee, repeatedly pressed Justice Department lawyers on a basic question:
Where is the legal precedent? The government couldn’t cite one.
The Pentagon’s position, advanced by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, is that retired service members remain subject to military authority and therefore have reduced First Amendment protections — even when they are sitting members of Congress.
Judge Leon pushed back, noting that no court has ever approved extending military speech restrictions to retirees in this way. He warned that adopting the government’s theory could chill speech by millions of retired service members, not just Kelly.
Kelly argues the case isn’t about military discipline at all — it’s about political retaliation. He says the Pentagon is attempting to punish him for constitutionally protected speech made in his capacity as a U.S. senator.
The backdrop matters. After the video was released, Donald Trump publicly accused the lawmakers involved of sedition, while the Defense Department initiated an investigation that could reduce Kelly’s rank and lifetime benefits.
The judge signaled he may rule quickly on Kelly’s request for an injunction.
What’s at stake isn’t limited to one senator.
The case tests whether the executive branch can retroactively police speech by retired officers — and whether military authority can be used to suppress dissent once someone leaves active service.
A ruling is expected soon.