Donald Trump fired Kristi Noem as US Homeland Security Secretaryon Thursday in Washington, abruptly removing one of the most visible faces of his immigration crackdown and naming Oklahoma senator Markwayne Mullin as his choice to replace her, according to a statement on his Truth Social platform.
The news came after two punishing days for Kristi Noem on Capitol Hill. The now-former secretary was hauled before Congress for hearings that mixed lethal policy failures with lurid personal questions. Lawmakers grilled her over thefatal shootings of two protesters in Minnesotaduring a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) operation, a controversial $200m advertising blitz that put her centre stage, and, in a jarring turn, rumours about an alleged affair with Trump loyalistCorey Lewandowski.
Noem's departure takes effect on 31 March and ends a tenure of roughly a year at the department that has been central to Trump's pledge to detain and deport large numbers of undocumented migrants. In public, the president tried to frame the dismissal as cordial. He wrote that Noem had 'served us well' and added, 'I thank Kristi for her service at 'Homeland.'' The attempt at warmth was hard to square with the speed of her removal.
Rather than cutting ties completely, Trump is shifting Kristi Noem into a nebulous diplomatic-sounding job. He said she will be appointed 'Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas', which he described as 'our new Security Initiative in the Western Hemisphere', adding that the initiative would be formally announced on Saturday.
At this stage, there is no public detail on what this envoy role involves, how it will operate or who she would report to. None of that appears in the official material released so far, so the scale and seriousness of 'The Shield of the Americas' should be treated with caution until further documents are available. It looks, for now, like a soft landing designed to remove her from the line of fire without an outright rupture.
During her time in charge, Kristi Noem presided over a vast expansion of DHS's immigration machinery. The department won what was described as a mammoth budget to increase detention centres and rapidly recruit federal immigration enforcement officers. Rights groups have accused those officers of surging into US cities with what they characterise as brutal tactics and jailing tens of thousands of people in detention camps across the country.
Noem is a named defendant in what the article describes as 'countless' lawsuits challenging the administration's attempts to swiftly arrest, detain and deport large numbers of people. Many of those cases remain unresolved, leaving a legal tangle for whoever follows her into the job.
Trump's choice of Markwayne Mullin as successor signals no obvious moderation of that approach. The Oklahoma senator will still have to be confirmed, but the nomination was rolled out almost as soon as Noem's fate was sealed, underlining the White House's desire to move past her troubles while keeping the deportation agenda intact.
If there was a single trigger for Kristi Noem's fall, it was the $200m DHS advertising campaign that turned her into the polished face of Trump's deportation drive. During this week's hearings, Noem told Congress that the president had supported the campaign, which used federal funds and heavily featured her in a promotional push for the administration's immigration agenda.
Within a day, Trump flatly contradicted her. 'I never knew anything about it,' he told Reuters, distancing himself from the $200m price tag and the optics of a Cabinet secretary starring in her own taxpayer-funded publicity drive. That statement undermined Noem's testimony and left one of them exposed. The White House has not provided further detail to reconcile the conflicting accounts.
Source: International Business Times UK