Sometimes getting yelled at by the president turns out to be great for your political career. Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) is learning this firsthand after a very public confrontation with President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has launched him into the 2028 presidential conversation.
From Arizona Senator to National Figure
Kelly has been everywhere lately. Late-night television, political talk shows, the whole circuit. And when content creator Aaron Parnas asked him point-blank about running for president in 2028, Kelly didn't dodge the question.
"Of course," Kelly said. "I think it would be irresponsible not to think about it."
That's about as close to "I'm running" as you get without actually saying it.
The Video That Started It All
The whole thing kicked off in November when Kelly appeared in a video alongside other Democratic lawmakers. The message was straightforward: U.S. service members aren't obligated to follow illegal orders. It's basic military law, the kind of thing they teach at the academies.
The Trump administration saw it differently. Trump called the video "seditious behavior," which is quite the escalation. Then Hegseth announced a Pentagon misconduct review that could potentially lower Kelly's retirement rank and pay. Kelly is a retired Navy pilot and four-time astronaut, so we're talking about someone with a pretty distinguished service record.
Kelly's response was measured but firm. "He is not intimidating me, and he's not going to," Kelly told Vanity Fair last month, referring to Trump. "I have been through, you know, harder things than this."
When you've been to space four times, presidential threats probably hit different.




