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Trump Announces He Is Replacing Noem With Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma

The president tapped Markwayne Mullin as the new homeland security secretary after Kristi Noem was grilled by Republicans at a congressional hearing.

 President Trump fired his embattled homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, on Thursday and announced plans to replace her with Senator Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, after she was grilled by Republican lawmakers this week at congressional hearings on a variety of topics, including her knowledge of a lucrative advertising contract.

Mr. Trump announced the change on social media, along with a new, and previously nonexistent, role for Ms. Noem: special envoy for the Shield of the Americas, which he said would be a new security initiative for the Western Hemisphere.

Mr. Trump is close with Mr. Mullin, a Republican, and speaks with him regularly.

Ms. Noem — the first cabinet member to be ousted in Mr. Trump’s second term — had been among the key figures in the administration fulfilling his mass deportation effort, which he campaigned on aggressively and which was heavily influenced by Stephen Miller, a top White House adviser.

But her tenure had been marked by a string of controversies, and her fate had been the focus of speculation among Mr. Trump’s allies for several weeks. On Thursday, the president contradicted remarks that Ms. Noem made under penalty of perjury in her hearing before a Senate panel on Wednesday: that Mr. Trump had signed off ​on a border security advertising campaign featuring Ms. Noem.

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“I ​never knew anything about it,” ​Mr. Trump told Reuters. A White House spokeswoman declined to comment, and referred a reporter to Mr. Trump’s comments to Reuters.

Ms. Noem has faced scrutiny ​from lawmakers about the campaign, on which the government spent $220 million. The firm handling it was connected to the husband of Ms. Noem’s former spokeswoman.

The ads prominently featured Ms. Noem, including in a scene filmed on horseback at Mount Rushmore in ​the former ​South Dakota governor’s home state.

Pressed at a separate hearing on Tuesday about the process for awarding the contracts behind the ad campaign, Ms. Noem said that it all went through “a competitive ​process,” and that no political appointees were involved. On Wednesday, she said the contract was “all ​done correctly, all done ​legally.”

Senator John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican who forcefully questioned Ms. Noem over ad contracts, told reporters on Thursday that he received a call from the president about her testimony. “Put it this way,” he said. “His recollection and her recollection are different.”

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/03/05/us/trump-news