Trump picks Kristi Noem to serve as his Homeland Security secretary
President-elect Donald Trump has selected South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem as his next secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Noem will be tapped to take over the agency as two key immigration hardliners, Stephen Miller and Tom Homan, are slated to serve in senior roles, signaling Trump is serious about his promise to crack down on his immigration pledges.
With his selection of Kristi Noem, Trump is ensuring a loyalist will head an agency he prioritizes and that is key to his domestic agenda.
The DHS saw an immense amount of turmoil the last time Trump was in office. Then, DHS had five different leaders, only two of whom were Senate-confirmed. The agency has a $60 billion budget and hundreds of thousands of employees. Noem, who previously was a South Dakota representative, will now be tasked with overseeing a sprawling agency that oversees everything from United States Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement to the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the United States Secret Service.
Kristi Noem had once been on Trump’s shortlist for vice president, though her relationship with Trump shifted after the negative rollout surrounding the publication of her book, “No Going Back: The Truth on What’s Wrong with Politics and How We Move America Forward”. In it, Noem revealed that she once killed her 14-month-old wirehair pointer, Cricket, when she was not displaying the signs of an ideal hunting dog. Noem wrote that the dog was untrainable.
Noem later argued that those anecdotes were meant to show how capable she is of doing some of the more gruesome jobs in life when necessary.
Related Posts
-
Arizona Gov. Ducey announces aggressive plan to expand access to flu vaccine Governor Doug Ducey held a conference on August 31st 2020 on the same day that Arizona reported 174 new covid cases but no
-
Nevada woman accused in bitcoin murder-for-hire plot Nevada is a landlocked state in the Western region of the United States. A Nevada woman has been accused by California prosecutors of