The following transcript comes from a press conference on Capitol Hill on July 1, 2026 

Hello everyone. Thank you for being here.

First and foremost, I’d like to thank Jessica Denson for making all of this possible. Thank you, Jessica. You are a hero and a patriot.

Thank you to Representative Al Green for being here for this moment and lending his support.

I’m grateful for the support of the many groups represented here that believe in the message I am here to share with you.

I am also grateful beyond words for my friends and allies who have helped me navigate my way to this point, investing so much of their time, effort, and advice.

A tremendous thank you to the Defenders of Our Republic community, whether they are here with me today or out there doing the work needed to restore responsible governance to our country.

Lastly, a heartfelt thank you to my parents, whom I love more than they know, for doing such an incredible job raising me to be the man I am today.

My name is Jason Watson. I’m an active-duty Major in the United States Air Force. However, who I am is immaterial. In the grand scheme of things, I’m just a nobody. What matters far more than who I am is what I have to say and the price I’m willing to pay to say it.

“I, Jason Paul Watson, do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office upon which I am about to enter. So help me God.”

I first swore this oath over 20 years ago upon entering basic cadet training at the United States Air Force Academy in late June of 2005. I’ve repeated it many times since then.

The oath of office means everything to me. It is foundational to our system of government in the United States. The oath ensures that officials of our government owe allegiance not to any individual or political party, but to our Constitution and the democratic republic it represents.

Our Constitution binds us all together as Americans.

Like countless veterans before me and military members serving now, I have devoted my life to serving our democratic republic, always doing my best to honor my oath and protect America against foreign threats.

But the greatest threat to our democratic republic is not a foreign one. It is us.

We the people—not just the left, not just the right, not just the center. All of us together define who we are as Americans.

And, like it or not, we have all played a part, myself included, in getting ourselves into this mess. The burden of that culpability is much heavier for some than others, undeniably. And for those with the lion’s share of guilt—such as those currently running the executive branch of the federal government—the bill must come due. But all of us have a share.

For the past 18 months, we the people have allowed the highest levels of the executive branch of the federal government to violate our Constitution and their oath to it with impunity.

When the President of the United States orders military action against foreign countries absent an emergency scenario where American interests are under imminent, dire threat—as was done with Venezuela, Cuba, and Iran—that is an unconstitutional usurpation of Congress’s authority and a violation of the War Powers Clause.

These violations resulted in the deaths of 13 service members and injuries to hundreds more.

For this, the President and Vice President must be impeached, convicted, and removed.

When the President of the United States grants an unelected mega-donor sweeping authority to shut down large swaths of our federal government, along with unrestricted access to our government databases, that is an unconstitutional circumvention of Congress’s advice-and-consent authority under the Appointments Clause and Congress’s power of the purse under the Appropriations Clause.

These violations exposed every American’s sensitive personal data to leaks and exploitation, illegally terminated tens of thousands of federal civil servants, crippled support for Americans needing medical care and disaster preparedness, and—most tragically—resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of the world’s most impoverished people through the inhumane, abrupt cessation of U.S. aid.

For this, the President and Vice President must be impeached, convicted, and removed.

When the President of the United States directs the Department of Homeland Security to deny hundreds of people due process before illegally detaining them and sending them to a foreign prison notorious for human rights abuses, that is a violation of our Fifth and Eighth Amendment rights.

Most people sent to CECOT never committed any violent crimes in their lives, but are being defamed as violent criminals as a pretext for the torture they suffered in El Salvador, paid for with U.S. taxpayer dollars.

For this, the President and Vice President must be impeached, convicted, and removed.

When the President of the United States sponsors violence against the American people engaged in their constitutional right to peacefully assemble and protest, that is a violation of our First Amendment rights.

Pastors praying for DHS agents were violently attacked without provocation. A legal observer lost an eye after being struck by a so-called non-lethal round fired by an ICE agent. A woman attempting to follow chaotic and contradictory DHS instructions was fatally shot. A subdued man who posed no threat was fatally shot after having his firearm removed, while statements by high-ranking cabinet members also violated our Second Amendment rights.

For this, the President and Vice President must be impeached, convicted, and removed.

There are innumerable more impeachable offenses that I could cover: denying congressional oversight of immigrant detention centers that look increasingly like CECOT; suing media organizations, colleges, and law firms for billions of dollars while abusing executive branch agencies to extort settlements; allowing a mega-donor to advertise products on the White House lawn; trading pardons for donations; levying illegal tariffs; weaponizing the Department of Justice against political adversaries while ignoring crimes committed by supporters and enablers; and attempting to reverse birthright citizenship through executive order.

For all of these high crimes and misdemeanors, the President and Vice President must be impeached, convicted, and removed.

The constitutional impeachment process is our best pathway to restore fidelity to our Constitution.

This is why I am here standing in solidarity with Representative Green.

I am not here because I am a Democrat or because I share his policy positions. I’m not a Democrat and know next to nothing about his policies. I am here with him because Representative Green is the only member of Congress who has demonstrated the courage and conviction to invoke Rule IX and force a vote on articles of impeachment.

If Congress followed his example, we could remove the entire Trump administration.

But Congress remains unconvinced of the urgency and necessity of honoring its oath.

So we must persuade them with our unrelenting, uncompromising civil resistance.

I am calling on average Americans everywhere to peacefully exercise your First Amendment rights every day until this administration is removed and our democratic republic is restored.

I believe in America.

I believe in us.

If just a nobody like me can take a stand for our Constitution and our democratic republic, then you can too.

I hope you will join me in the defense of our republic.

Thank you.