By Katherine Tinsley
2:14am PDT, Mar 28, 2025
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Piers Morgan and Hillary Clinton have agreed on something for possibly the first time ever. The former secretary of state found herself in the strange position of backing up the divisive English media personality after he shared a hot take on the Trump administration's recent group chat scandal … though Morgan ultimately slipped in a parting shot at Clinton's own security leak scandal.Keep reading for the details…
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"If you don't consider this to be classified info about imminent war plans, it *may* be that you're too partisan to recognise the truth when it slaps you around your tribal chops," Piers Morgan wrote on X on Wednesday, March 26.Morgan often defends Donald Trump, but he pointed out how harmful it was for members of his administration to share intel with a reporter.
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Piers Morgan later pointed out the double standard, noting that Joe Biden's team would've been greatly criticized if they'd made the same slip-up."If this had happened on Biden's watch, Republicans would have rightly gone berserk," he said.
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Hillary Clinton, who was ridiculed by current members of Donald Trump's cabinet for an email scandal during her presidential campaign, later reposted Piers Morgan's message."Never thought I'd be retweeting Piers Morgan, but he's right," Clinton wrote on X.
Morgan later shared a screenshot of his social media activity with the former first lady on Instagram, joking in the caption, "Finally, Hillary smashes a glass ceiling."
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Piers Morgan later alluded to Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server during her time as secretary of state."Do you know much about classified info breaches?" he asked her on X.
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After Jeffrey Goldberg announced he was included in a group chat with Pete Hegseth, J.D. Vance and other key members of Donald Trump's team, Hillary Clinton reacted on X."You have got to be kidding me," the former secretary of state wrote.
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Pete Hegseth insisted that "nobody was texting war plans" in the group chat with The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg. But the journalist hit back against that claim during an interview with CNN's Kaitlan Collins.
Collins tweeted on Monday, March 24, "The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg responds: 'That's a lie. He was texting war plans, he was texting attack plans. When targets were going to targeted. How they were going to be targeted. Who was at the targets. When the next sequence of attacks were happening. I didn't publish this … because it felt like it was too confidential."
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At one point, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth insisted on X that Jeffrey Goldberg never had access to classified information."So, let's me get this straight. The Atlantic released the so-called 'war plans' and those 'plans' include: No names. No targets," he wrote. "No locations. No units. No routes. No sources. No methods. And no classified information."
Goldberg later released screenshots of more messages from the group chat in which the Trump admin discussed war plans in detail.