By Shawn Fleetwood | The Federalist
A former fighter pilot previously fired for warning about the embrace of Marxism in the Biden-era military pledged to restore accountability and a “warrior ethos” throughout the Air Force on Thursday.
The comments were made by Space Force Lt. Col. Matthew Lohmeier during his Senate confirmation hearing to be the next under secretary of the Air Force. The former officer was tapped for the role by President Trump days before the latter’s January inauguration.
Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Lohmeier spoke of his history serving in both the Air and Space Forces and discussed how his nominated position requires him to “be a strong advocate for a larger and better funded Department of the Air Force.” He also referenced the trust placed in him by Trump to “be a driving force behind a culture of integrity in the Department of the Air Force.”
“This includes eliminating all unnecessary distractions and enabling military members to focus on their mission,” Lohmeier said.
“Secretary Hegseth has said his priorities include restoring the warrior ethos and a focus on warfighting, rebuilding the military, and reestablishing deterrence. I am firmly aligned with those priorities, and there are unique ways in which they must be accomplished in the Air and Space Forces.”
“If confirmed, all of my efforts will be nested within that framework,” he added.
Lohmeier was fired from the Space Force in May 2021 after publicly discussing the increasing presence of DEI racism throughout the armed forces.
While promoting his book during a May podcast interview earlier that month, for example, he said, “Our diversity, inclusion, and equity [DEI] industry and the trainings we’re receiving in the military via that industry are rooted in critical race theory which is rooted in Marxism.” He also reportedly criticized The New York Times’ debunked 1619 Project, characterizing the outlet’s falsified portrayal of U.S. history as “anti-American.”
As CBS News described, Lohmeier then went on to make clear that “he doesn’t care about the political views of his fellow service members, whether they’re Democrats or Republicans, but he does not want to see institutions politicized.”
Gen. Stephen Whiting — who reportedly played a role in Lohmeier’s dismissal — was promoted to lead U.S. Space Force Command by President Joe Biden. Whiting has a history of using his position to advance DEI throughout the service, as The Federalist previously reported.
While Thursday’s Senate committee hearing also considered the nominations of Daniel Zimmerman (assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs) and Justin Overbaugh (deputy under secretary of defense for intelligence and security), many of the body’s Democrats spent much of their speaking time attempting to smear Lohmeier as a dangerous partisan unworthy of confirmation.
After rattling off a series of “disqualifying” reasons behind his apparent opposition to Lohmeier’s nomination in his opening statement, ranking chair and Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., feigned outrage over a tweet the former Space Force lieutenant colonel posted in October 2024 in his capacity as a private citizen. The post, which contained a clip of Lohmeier speaking of his experiences with his then-higher-ups over “anti-American” ideology in the force, reads: “If we are fortunate enough to see a Trump presidency once again, then there will be serious consequences for those senior leaders who have broken their oath, betrayed the trust of the American people, and participated in the hyper-politicization of the uniformed services.”
In an apparent attempt to advance the left’s phony narrative that Trump is politicizing the military, Reed probed Lohmeier on what he meant by “serious consequences,” all while ignoring the rank politicization of the force that occurred under the Biden administration.
Lohmeier reaffirmed his belief in the importance of maintaining an “apolitical military,” saying “it was one of the driving, motivating factors” for the “things [he] wrote and spoke about” prior to his separation from the service in 2021. He further emphasized that he was “never publicly critical of [his] chain of command [and] was never publicly critical of [his] senior leaders while [he] served in the uniform.”
“If confirmed, [I’m] very committed to making sure that we eliminate political distractions from the military workplace. Our service members and the American people truly deserve the opportunity to serve in a nonpartisan military workplace,” Lohmeier said.
“What I meant by the statement was that I believe that a Trump presidency … would take accountability very seriously. We wouldn’t overlook that kind of partisan politicization of the military workplace that I believe we had experienced in past years.”
In response to a follow-up question from Reed about potentially “target[ing] … people [he] had differences with,” Lohmeier pledged to ensure “a culture of accountability in the Department of the Air Force.” He also noted that the aforementioned post was “not intended to be retroactive or retributional in nature but simply intended to communicate that leaders who prioritize accountability and high standards will do the American people and service members a service by committing to that.”
But Reed’s dishonest interrogation was only the beginning of Democrats’ attacks on Lohmeier.
Following the predictably awful “questioning” from Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, which largely focused on smearing Lohmeier, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., took his turn attacking the former Space Force officer — even going as far as to cite a Bible verse to do so.
“There’s a beautiful phrase in the New Testament, in both the gospels of Luke and Matthew, that goes something like this: ‘From the fullness of the heart, the mouth speaks.’ And, Mr. Lohmeier, I want to ask you about your very active mouth and what it reveals about your heart,” Kaine said.
Virginia’s junior senator then cited a series of Lohmeier’s tweets, one of which reads, “The Left lies about nearly everything it does. And tens of millions of Americans believe the lies.” Kaine argued that Lohmeier was “calling tens of millions of Americans ‘dupes.’”
The Democrat senator also referenced an August 2024 post from Lohmeier that mentioned the Jan. 6, 2021, demonstrations at the U.S. Capitol. Accompanied by a photo of an Air Force Times article about alleged “extremism” in the military, the tweet reads, “Picked this up in my base exchange at Buckley Air Force Base several weeks after J6. This is what the Biden/Harris administration ushered in; after a gov’t-led false flag and hoax at the Capitol, they immediately demonized the men and women in uniform. Then they purged conservatives and Christians with their shot mandates. Brilliant planning actually.”
Responding to Kaine, Lohmeier said he did “not recall having written” the latter post, saying it “could be partly a memory problem.” He then noted that he believes “private citizens in this country can have the right to express their views, as mean or as wrong as they might be, and that the men and women in uniform defend the right of the private citizen … to speak those views.”
“My concern while I was uniform was, in fact, that the kind of partisan rhetoric that I had used that you just quoted from … was actually being inserted into the military workplace in a way that divides troops, and so I was trying to hold our military cultural and workplace environment accountable to a standard of nonpartisanship … so that we can thrive in unity and not division,” Lohmeier said.
Other Democrats to pile on Lohmeier included Sens. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Mark Kelly of Arizona, and Tammy Duckworth of Illinois.
Shawn Fleetwood is a staff writer for The Federalist and a graduate of the University of Mary Washington. He previously served as a state content writer for Convention of States Action and his work has been featured in numerous outlets, including RealClearPolitics, RealClearHealth, and Conservative Review. Follow him on Twitter @ShawnFleetwood
First published on The Federalist
Add @timkaine to the list of liars! You INTENTIONALLY left out the context of Lt Col Lohmeier’s posts. The last administration called us EXTREMISTS. You left that out of your opinion-based questions.
— Jordan Karr (@JordanLkarr) May 1, 2025
No police officers died at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 @timkaine
— Col. Rob Maness ret. 🇺🇸 (@RobManess) May 1, 2025
Hey @SenDuckworth filing 138’s, becoming a whistleblower, filing IG complaints, etc does not do anything. Ask @MCBashaw who did ALL of those and was retaliated against, court Martialed, and CONVICTED by a political Jag (Vindman). Congress did not help him. You are disingenuous!
— Jordan Karr (@JordanLkarr) May 1, 2025
This was my favorite exchange from Lt Col Lohmeier’s hearing yesterday for a couple of reasons:
1- Matt began to share the real life impact that his politically-motivated firing, under the last administration, had on his family. Of course the senator didn’t want to hear it.… pic.twitter.com/sARXC4uFD6
— Jordan Karr (@JordanLkarr) May 2, 2025
“This was my favorite exchange from Lt Col Lohmeier’s hearing yesterday for a couple of reasons:
1- Matt began to share the real life impact that his politically-motivated firing, under the last administration, had on his family. Of course the senator didn’t want to hear it.
2- @SenDuckworth mentioned exhausting every recourse afforded to us as service members and indicated that had Matt chosen to do that, he might have somehow saved his career. Anyone who pushed back against the unlawful Covid mandates knows this is completely untrue. Many of us filed: IG, article 138, EO, whistleblower complaints, congressional inquiries, sued the DoD, and one even wrote a book about it. None of those avenues resulted in recourse for us. In fact, one soldier, @MCBashaw pursued all of those avenues and was retaliated against by @YVindman who convicted him in a courts martial and celebrated the political persecution on social media. So Senator Duckworth, where have you been?
Lastly I’ll share that Matt’s testimony and the fact that he’s nominated to be undersecretary of the Air Force is a testament to the strength and love of his family and their faith in God.
He will make an amazing undersecretary of the Air Force. 🇺🇸
“And we know that for those who love God, all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose”. Romans 8:28
We all immediately thought of mark. Like “is she serious right now?” 🤦🏻♀️
— Jordan Karr (@JordanLkarr) May 2, 2025
Nice how she spouts all this off (while reading a prepared statement), yet none of those things actually work once you file them. “You didn’t consider filing an article 138 complaint that the same chain of command who is doing the thing will decide if it’s legit or not.” Moron.
— Seth Ritter (@DS_SethRit) May 2, 2025
The Senator gave clear evidence that she was not wanting to interact with Lt Col Lohmeier. She was mindlessly reading a script. She knows that he is a thousand times more competent than her in public service.
— Zach Emmott (@z246779) May 2, 2025
Men like @matthewlohmeier give me hope of fixing our military.
His fight against our corrupt “leaders” & mine were different, but the basic premise was the same. They were failing our country & those under their command & we stood in the gap to defend our brothers in arms. https://t.co/XtAlhyi6QZ
— Nick Kupper (@realnickkupper) May 2, 2025
Jordan is spot on. Duckworth knows full well that norms trump policies.
There are plenty of ‘rules’ for military members to make complaints about senior commanders who break the law. But those complaints are always either lost, ignored, or dismissed. Everyone knows the process… https://t.co/j5oAcz56yO
— Chase Spears (@DrChaseSpears) May 2, 2025
“Jordan is spot on. Duckworth knows full well that norms trump policies.
There are plenty of ‘rules’ for military members to make complaints about senior commanders who break the law. But those complaints are always either lost, ignored, or dismissed. Everyone knows the process is nothing more than a paper drill.
But more importantly is this idea that there are ‘rules’ that prohibit military members from expressing their concerns about military policy, and lawbreaking by higher ups. There are in fact NO SUCH RULES. Service members remain citizens in law and policy. But it’s very different in practice, given the public’s mercenary mindset towards the all-volunteer force.
There are rules about obeying lawful orders from commanders. But from what I have been told about Duckworth’s habit in that regard, she shouldn’t hold herself up as a paragon there.
Unfortunately, these hearings are sadly little more than an opportunity for members of congress to posture before the cameras with prepared speeches that offer only the slightest illusion of legitimate exploration to inform their votes.
Lohmeier, Nominee for Under SECAF, Defends Record in Confirmation Hearing
MORE: https://t.co/TgLqeo24CJ pic.twitter.com/j8ERaDwS19— Air & Space Forces Association (@AFA_Air_Space) May 2, 2025
Watch the hearing:
Matthew Lohmeier Hearing for Under Secretary of the Air Force held 1 May 2025
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