Thursday, March 27, 2025

Rubio breaks silence on leaked Signal chat: 'Someone made a big mistake'
Rubio reaffirms no intelligence divulged in Signal text exchange
Cailin McFall / FOX News

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, for the first time, on Wednesday addressed the Signal-chat controversy and conceded that "someone made a big mistake" when a journalist from the Atlantic was added to Signal text chain that included Washington’s top national security heads. 

"This thing was set up for purposes of coordinating," Rubio told reporters from Jamaica, noting the point of the text exchange carried out on the encrypted messaging application was purely so officials knew how to communicate with their various counterparts. 

But the revelation that potentially classified information was exchanged on a site that has been the target of Russian hackers, and that the chain included an editor from the Atlantic, sent shockwaves globally – though the Pentagon maintains that no classified intelligence was exchanged in the messages. 

"Obviously, someone made a mistake. Someone made a big mistake and added a journalist," Rubio said. "Nothing against journalists. But you ain't supposed to be on that thing." Read more and see video here.

Let's Talk About the Judge Presiding Over the Signal Chat Lawsuit
Matt Vespa / Townhall Tipsheet 
The judge who is trying to prevent the deportation of foreign terrorists is going to preside over the recent lawsuit over the Signal chat use by government officials. James Boasberg, who thinks he is the head of the Department of Homeland Security and overseer of all federal immigration policy, will handle this case. It’s a terrible joke, and another headache for the Trump administration (via Fox News):

A new lawsuit targeting President Donald Trump's administration over leaked Pentagon plans in a Signal chat has been assigned to Judge James Boasberg, the same judge who ordered a halt to the administration's deportation efforts. 

The government watchdog group American Oversight filed the lawsuit on Wednesday, alleging that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and others violated federal records laws by discussing Houthi attack plans in a Signal groupchat. The contest has now been randomly assigned to Boasberg, who serves on the U.S. District Court for Washington, D.C. Read more and see Xs here.