Senate heads toward confirming Kristi Noem as Trump's homeland security
secretary
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[January 25, 2025]
By STEPHEN GROVES
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate is heading towards a vote on confirming
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as homeland security secretary, placing
her at the head of a sprawling agency that will be essential to both
national security and President Donald Trump's plans to squash illegal
immigration.
Republicans were determined to barrel through on Noem's confirmation,
threatening to keep the Senate working through the weekend to install
Trump's national security Cabinet officials. Defense Secretary Pete
Hegseth won confirmation Friday night, and Secretary of State Marco
Rubio and CIA Director John Ratcliffe were already in place.
Noem, a Trump ally who is in her second term as South Dakota governor,
received some support from Democrats on the Senate Homeland Security
Committee when it voted 13-2 to advance her nomination earlier this
week. Republicans, who already hold the votes necessary to confirm her,
have also expressed confidence in her determination to lead border
security and immigration enforcement.
“Fixing this crisis and restoring respect for the rule of law is one of
President Trump and Republicans’ top priorities,” Senate Majority Leader
John Thune, a fellow South Dakota Republican, said Friday. “And it’s
going to require a decisive and committed leader at the Department of
Homeland Security. I believe Kristi has everything it takes to undertake
this task."
Noem will oversee U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and
Customs Enforcement and Citizenship and Immigration Services. Beyond
those agencies, the department is also responsible for securing airline
transportation, protecting dignitaries, responding to natural disasters
and more.
Trump is planning major changes to the way the department functions,
including involving the military in immigration enforcement and
reshaping the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Those plans could
immediately put Noem in the spotlight after the new president visited
recent disaster sites in North Carolina and California on Friday.
During her confirmation hearing, Noem was repeatedly asked by Democratic
senators whether she would administer disaster aid to states even if
Trump asked her not to.
Noem avoided saying that she would defy the president, but told the
homeland security panel, “I will deliver the programs according to the
law and that it will be done with no political bias.”
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South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, President-elect Donald Trump's
nominee to be Secretary of Homeland Security, appears before the
Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee for her
confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Jan. 17,
2025. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Still, Noem will be entering a job that was a pressure cooker under
the first Trump administration. Six people cycled through the
homeland security secretary position during his first four years in
office.
Noem, who held her state's lone U.S. House seat for eight years
before becoming governor in 2019, has risen in the GOP by tacking
closely with Trump. At one point, she was even under consideration
to be his running mate.
Her political stock took a momentary dip, however, when she released
a book last year containing an account of her killing her hunting
dog, as well as a false claim that she once met with North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un.
Now she will be tasked with delivering on Trump's favorite issue,
border security. The president's goals of deporting millions of
people who entered the country illegally could also still put Noem,
with her experience governing a rural state and growing up on a
farm, in a difficult position. In her home state of South Dakota,
many migrants, some in the country without permanent legal status,
power the labor-heavy jobs that produce food and housing.
She has so far pledged to faithfully execute the president's orders
and copied his talk of an “invasion” at the U.S. border with Mexico.
As governor, Noem joined other Republican governors who sent
National Guard troops to Texas to assist Operation Lone Star, which
sought to discourage migrants. Her decision was especially
criticized because she accepted a $1 million donation from a
Tennessee billionaire to cover some of the deployment cost.
Noem said she opted to send National Guard troops “because of this
invasion," adding that “it is a war zone down there.”
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