May 06, 2026
Following Armed Services Committee Hearing, Warren Questions Hegseth on Trump Family Pentagon Contracts
Questions come as Trump sons' drone company Powerus receives new Air Force contract
Questions for Secretary Hegseth (PDF)
Washington, D.C. - In new Questions for the Record following last week's Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), pressed Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth about President Trump's sons' ties to defense contractors and how the DoD is handling these financial conflicts of interest. The questions come as a follow-up to last week's hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and days after reports indicated that Powerus, a drone company backed by the Trump sons, had recently obtained a new Air Force contract.
Shortly after President Trump was elected to his second term, his son, Donald Trump Jr., announced he was joining venture capital firm 1789 Capital. After Trump Jr. joined the firm, the firm's portfolio companies reportedly won more than $70 million worth of contracts from the Trump Administration, including:
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$45 million awarded to Cerebras Systems in April 2025 to improve artificial intelligence chip connections;
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$10.8 million awarded to PsiQuantum in April 2025 for quantum chips;
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$4.9 million awarded to Firehawk Aerospace in August 2025 to develop rocket engines; and
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$10 million to Vulcan Elements for magnets in 2025.
Several of the Trump Jr.-connected companies had never received such large DoD contracts prior to 2025. In early March, reports revealed that the Trump brothers are also investing in drone company Powerus, which is "vying to meet fresh demand from the Pentagon and fill a hole left by the administration's ban on new Chinese drones in the U.S."
In March, Senators Warren and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) released answers from the Defense Department revealing that the Department seems to have no effective process in place to prevent conflicts of interest and corruption involving President Trump's family and the Pentagon's awarding of defense contracts. To date, Hegseth has not detailed any plan to protect the military's contracting process against conflicts of interest.
These instances highlight Secretary Hegseth's unwillingness to protect the military's budget and contracting process from potential corruption. Senator Warren's new Questions for the Record will require Secretary Hegseth to address these failures in writing.
Senator Warren's questions for Secretary Hegseth include:
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Justifications for loans and contracts offered to several companies in which the Trump family is financially invested;
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Whether Donald Trump Jr. has held any role in vetting candidates for top Pentagon positions; and
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Details of any conversations Secretary Hegseth had with the Trump family or their representatives regarding military contracts leading up to his confirmation.
Senator Warren has led the fight to root out corruption at the Defense Department:
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In April 2026, at a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator Warren (D-Mass.) pressed Secretary Hegseth on allegations that Trump administration officials are engaging in possible insider trading by placing bets on the Iran War through prediction markets.
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In April 2026, Senator Warren questioned Deputy Secretary of Defense Stephen Feinberg on his conflicts of interest, which may be enabling him, his immediate family, and his network of associates to benefit from secretive DoD contracting decisions related to its Golden Dome missile defense program. Senator Warren urged Feinberg to take immediate action to mitigate the conflicts.
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In March 2026, Senator Warren (D-Mass.) released a new response from DoD indicating that there are no effective processes in place to prevent possible conflicts of interest and corruption involving President Donald Trump's family and the Department's awarding of defense contracts. In a new letter, Senators Warren and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) pressed Secretary Hegseth on this failure and pushed for answers regarding Trump's sons' latest investment in Powerus, a drone company.
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In January 2026, Senators Warren (D-Mass.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), and Andy Kim (D-N.J.), pressed Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on potential conflicts of interest surrounding the awarding of multiple lucrative Department of Defense (DoD) contracts and loans to companies associated with President Donald Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr.
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In July 2025, Senators Warren (D-Mass.) and Rick Scott (R-Fla.), wrote to former Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin seeking an explanation and further information on his recent decision to start a strategic advisory firm. Austin had publicly promised Senator Warren during his 2021 confirmation process that he would not become a lobbyist after his government service ended.
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In July 2023, Senator Warren (D-Mass) wrote to then-Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, Heidi Shyu, following reporting that DoD's new Office of Strategic Capital (OSC) is relying on consultants who will continue to work for private defense consultants and defense investment companies. Senator Warren raised concerns that DoD lacked the necessary safeguards to prevent conflicts of interest in the OSC.
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In June 2023, Senator Warren and then-representative Andy Kim (D-N.J.) reintroduced the Department of Defense Ethics and Anti-Corruption Act to limit the influence of contractors on the military and increase transparency over contractors and their interaction with DoD.
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In December 2020, Senator Warren (D-Mass.) and Representative Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) reintroduced the Anti-Corruption & Public Integrity Act, to strengthen ethics laws and crack down on government officials' conflicts of interest across the government.
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