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Thursday, March 05, 2026

BREAKING: Trump FIRES DHS Secretary Kristi Noem

 

Trump Administration Live Updates: President Ousts Noem as Homeland Security Secretary

 

Trump Administration Live Updates: President Ousts Noem as Homeland Security Secretary

Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, was grilled by Republican lawmakers during a congressional hearing on Wednesday.Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

“What We’re Covering Today

  • Kristi Noem Fired: President Trump announced Thursday on social media that he was firing his homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, and wanted Senator Markwayne Mullin to replace her. In his announcement, Mr. Trump said Ms. Noem would move into a previously nonexistent security role. Read more ›

  • Secretary Under Siege: Ms. Noem’s tenure had been marred by a string of controversies, and she faced intense questioning this week from congressional Republicans, including about a lucrative advertising contract. Mr. Trump on Thursday contradicted her testimony that he had signed off on the $220 million ad campaign.

  • Markwayne Mullin: It was unclear how quickly the Senate would be able to move to confirm Mr. Mullin, an Oklahoma Republican. Senate Democrats again blocked an effort to end the weekslong shutdown of the departmenton Thursday, and Senator Chuck Schumer of New York said Ms. Noem’s firing did not change Democrats’ demands for restrictions on immigration enforcement. “The rot is deep,” he said.

Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, testifying before lawmakers this week on Capitol Hill.Eric Lee for The New York Times

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.

Madeleine Ngo
March 5, 2026, 2:42 p.m. ET3m ago

Noem has finished her remarks at the Nashville conference. She spoke for about 30 minutes and did not address her firing by President Trump.

Michael Gold
March 5, 2026, 2:36 p.m. ET8 minutes ago

Mullin said he has not had time to call Noem, whom he considers a friend. “She was tasked with a very difficult job,” he said. “I think she has done the best that she could do under the circumstances.”

But he added that he thought there were opportunities to learn from her tenure and “build off things that didn’t quite go as planned.” 

Carl Hulse
March 5, 2026, 2:36 p.m. ET8 minutes ago

Senator Chris Coons, Democrat of Delaware, said he would wait and see if his Senate colleague would be an improvement at homeland security but said, “It will be hard to be a downgrade.”

Madeleine Ngo
March 5, 2026, 2:35 p.m. ET9 minutes ago

Noem is answering questions from local organizations representing police officers, but they have not asked about her firing. Notably, she is still speaking as if she is leading the Department of Homeland Security. She said she was coming to meet with New York state sheriffs soon. 

President Trump said in his announcement that he wanted Senator Markwayne Mullin to start at the end of the month.

Catie Edmondson
March 5, 2026, 2:29 p.m. ET15 minutes ago

There’s quite a split screen playing out as Noem takes questions at a conference in Nashville while Republican senators are backslapping Mullin on the Senate floor in the middle of a vote.

Michael Gold
March 5, 2026, 2:26 p.m. ET18 minutes ago

Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the minority leader, would not commit to voting to confirm Mullin. And he said that Noem’s firing did not change Democrats’ demands for new restrictions on immigration enforcement in order to fund the Department of Homeland Security.

“This is a problem of policy, not personnel. The rot is deep,” Schumer said. “No one person can straighten this up until the president changes the whole agency, stops the violence, and reins in ICE.”

Megan Mineiro
March 5, 2026, 2:25 p.m. ET19 minutes ago

Senator John Fetterman, the Pennsylvania Democrat who has repeatedly broken with his party on key votes, said he would vote to confirm Mullin. He said it was a “good thing” that Noem was out of the job, and called Mullin a “nice upgrade.” 

Reid Epstein
March 5, 2026, 2:24 p.m. ET20 minutes ago

Gov. JB Pritzker of Illinois released a video  celebrating Noem’s firing. “Now that you’re gone, don’t think you get to just walk away,” he said. “I guarantee you, you will still be held accountable.”

He established a state commission in Illinois to collect evidence that federal agents broke the law while enforcing Trump’s deportation agenda.

Megan Mineiro
March 5, 2026, 2:23 p.m. ET21 minutes ago

Senator Markwayne Mullin just entered the Senate chamber and spoke briefly to reporters. He said he was excited but did not answer whether he believed he would be confirmed as the homeland security secretary.

Al Drago for The New York Times
Michael Gold
March 5, 2026, 2:22 p.m. ET22 minutes ago

Other reporters and I asked Mullin a few times if he wanted the job. He didn’t directly answer but said he would answer questions after the Senate voted. 

Perhaps fittingly, senators are voting on a measure related to the bill to fund the Homeland Security Department.

Megan Mineiro
March 5, 2026, 2:21 p.m. ET23 minutes ago

Senators who will need to vote on whether to confirm their colleague Markwayne Mullin, the Republican senator of Oklahoma, to lead the Department of Homeland Security are finding out at the Capitol from reporters that the president has fired Kristi Noem and tapped Mullin for her job. 

Republicans are beginning to line up behind Mullin, with Senator Todd Young of Indiana, calling him a well qualified, critical thinker. 

Democrats are gratified that Noem is out of the job, but most are declining to say whether they would support Mullin’s nomination. 

Senator Gary Peters, Democrat of Michigan, said the personnel change won’t impact Democrats demands to place new guardrails on immigration enforcement. “I don’t think it makes any difference,” he said. 

Michael Gold
March 5, 2026, 2:19 p.m. ET25 minutes ago

Senator Markwayne Mullin just arrived in a car for Senate votes. He said he had talked to President Trump before the statement went out on social media.

“We’re going to get on the same page, and do what things what we need to do,” he said. 

Michael Gold
March 5, 2026, 2:16 p.m. ET28 minutes ago

It is unclear how quickly the Senate will be able to move to confirm a new homeland security secretary, given that the chamber is in the middle of a protracted stalemate over funding the department. 

Neither Democrats, who are demanding new restrictions on immigration enforcement, nor the White House have suggested they have made progress in negotiating a deal to fund the department.

Madeleine Ngo
March 5, 2026, 2:14 p.m. ET30 minutes ago

Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary who was just fired by President Trump, is speaking at a conference in Nashville about federal partnerships with local law enforcement. She has not addressed her firing yet.

Michael Gold
March 5, 2026, 2:10 p.m. ET35 minutes ago

Asked if he saw Mullin as an upgrade, Senator Cory Booker, Democrat of New Jersey, said that Noem had done such a poor job as homeland security secretary that it was hard not to see Mullin as an improvement.

Michael Gold
March 5, 2026, 1:45 p.m. ET59 minutes ago

Less than an hour ago, Senator Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma told reporters that he had not spoken with the president this week and that he would not engage in hypotheticals. 

Department of Homeland Security

Senate Democrats on Thursday blocked for a third time a spending bill to reopen the Department of Homeland Security, insisting that they would not approve the measure without new curbs on immigration enforcement even amid President Trump’s war in Iran.

Twenty days after federal money for the department lapsed, Republicans had sought to pressure Democrats to relent and agree to fund the department without any new restrictions on the agents carrying out Mr. Trump’s deportation drive. They argued that the war in the Middle East made it even more important to fund security agencies, including the Transportation Security Administration and the Secret Service.

The Department of Homeland Security said Wednesday that officials were reviewing a contract for Camp East Montana, a detention center in El Paso that is facing growing scrutiny over its living conditions and is grappling with a measles outbreak. 

A spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security said officials were examining the center and that the department conducts rigorous inspections of facilities to “ensure they are meeting our high standards.”

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Wednesday pushed back against allegations that she and her deputies had “systematically obstructed the work” of the department’s inspector general, as he complained in a letter to Congress this week.

“He can have access to anything at the Department of Homeland Security; he can,” Ms. Noem said during testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, her second appearance on Capitol Hill this week.

House Republican leaders on Thursday called on Representative Tony Gonzales of Texas to suspend his re-election campaign after he admitted to a sexual relationship with a staff member who later took her own life.

Mr. Gonzales publicly acknowledged the extramarital affair on Wednesday, a day after he struggled to defeat Brandon Herrera, a hard-line conservative, YouTuber and gun rights activist known as the AK Guy, in his Republican primary. The two are now in a runoff to be decided in May, and was not clear whether Mr. Gonzales would heed G.O.P. leaders’ call to suspend his campaign.“

8 Diseases Doctors Often Dismissed as Anxiety

 

‘This is a needless war’: Americans share their thoughts on the US-Israel attacks on Iran | US-Israel war on Iran | The Guardian

‘This is a needless war’: Americans share their thoughts on the US-Israel attacks on Iran

"The Guardian asked US readers about the military action in Iran – their responses were largely disapproving

people standing in rubble after an airstrike
People inspect the site of the US-Israel strike on a police station in Tehran, Iran, on 3 March 2026.Photograph: Majid Khahi/Reuters

As hundreds of civilians and some US service members have been killed in the aftermath of the 28 February strike against Iran by the United States and Israel, the Guardian asked readers in the US what their thoughts are on the latest military action in Iran.

Their responses were largely disapproving, with some acknowledging that the Iranian regime needed to be toppled, even with a high cost.

“I don’t have any love lost for the ayatollahs,” said Iraj Roshan, a 66-year-old retired cardiologist and US citizen who was born in Tehran, in an interview with the Guardian. “But these wars are won by narrative.”

Roshan fled to Turkey after the Iranian revolution, making his way to Austria and later the US, where he has lived since 1983.

Over the last decade, Donald Trump has denounced US military intervention in other countries. In December 2016, the then president-elect said: “We will stop racing to topple foreign regimes that we know nothing about, that we shouldn’t be involved with.” On the campaign trail – in 2016, 2020 and 2024 – Trump and his allies spoke against foreign intervention, painting Democrats as enablers of war. In a series of social media posts days before the 2024 election day, Trump adviser Stephen Miller repeatedly warned that a win for Kamala Harris, the then vice-president, would lead to young men being “drafted to fight” in a “3rd World War”.

Roshan argues that the US government does not have a strategy in the Middle East.

“I don’t see any way this war is going to end in a way that the US can declare victory without putting boots on the ground or without arming the Iranians themselves,” he said. 

“I hate to see that so many American kids are going to be eventually dragged into a war that we cannot win – at least by any definition that we could write down today.”

Meg, a 41-year-old small business owner based in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, spoke about the impacts of the strike on her community, which is home to the largest Arab community in New York City – approximately 10% of the neighborhood’s population.

“For a lot of my Muslim friends, this is their favorite time of year,” Meg told the Guardian, referring to the holiday of Ramadan, which began on 17 February and continues through 19 March. “So to have this renewed tragedy strike in the middle of that, as somebody on the outskirts who cares about people in my community and in my circle of friends, it breaks my heart.”

Meg also spoke of the persistent terrors that many of her neighbors have faced, first from the threat of ICE raids and then the strikes on Iran.

“That’s been an ongoing drum beat of terror in my neighborhood,” she said. “How much can people take? How much suffering has to be inflicted on them for mindless reasons?”

Barb, a 74-year-old retired mental health counsellor based in North Carolina, wrote in to the Guardian: “We can be sure that Trump has launched this war for selfish purposes.

“Whether to flaunt his power, to control the headlines (away from Epstein), or to entertain himself, this needless war is not for the benefit of the Iranian people,” she continued.

While many lawmakers, US citizens and others around the world have pushed back on Trump for unnecessary US involvement in a foreign regime change, others struck a less critical tone. 

“The [Iranian] regime is a very controlling and horrible thing,” Sriram Shanmugam, an 18-year-old in Texas who identifies as a Republican, shared with the Guardian. “My father escaped during the Iranian revolution, and I have many relatives in the Middle East too.”

However, Shanmugam acknowledged that the US is “not doing much to minimize civilian casualties, and that we have no real plan after we finish this operation”.

“What will replace the government of Iran, and will we have boots on the ground? Is there any guarantee that this won’t be our generation’s Afghanistan or Iraq?” he asked.

A 47-year-old social worker in Washington, who asked to remain anonymous, wrote about the impact that another war will have on US veterans.

“I spent 15 years working as a social worker therapist specifically with combat veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan,” she said. “Those wars turned millionaires into billionaires and created a lifetime of emotional pain and physical pain for those who served.”

She also pointed to the myriad of domestic issues that people in the US are facing, including an affordability crisis and fewer jobs.

“People in our country are suffering on the streets, homeless, without health insurance, without hope,” she wrote. “And this is where the government focuses its money and energy?”


‘This is a needless war’: Americans share their thoughts on the US-Israel attacks on Iran | US-Israel war on Iran | The Guardian

Wednesday, March 04, 2026

Why Crockett Lost, Iran Don't Stop Epstein and Touch Grass!

 

Trump administration has still not settled on reasons for going to war with Iran

 

Trump administration has still not settled on reasons for going to war with Iran

“The Trump administration’s justification for going to war with Iran has shifted multiple times, from Iran’s crackdown on protesters to its nuclear and ballistic weapons programs. Secretary of State Marco Rubio revealed that Israel was planning a preemptive strike against Iran, contradicting the administration’s claims of an imminent Iranian threat to the US. This revelation suggests that Israel’s interests played a larger role in the US’s decision to launch strikes against Iran.

President Donald Trump is walking up a set of stairs towards an Air Force One, after Israel and the US launched strikes on Iran
Trump initially claimed he was sending warships to the Middle East because of Iran’s crackdown on pro-democracy protesters. Photograph: Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters

It took months for the Bush administration’s falsehoods about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq to come to light, after an invasion, regime change, an investigation, and then, finally, the truth. For the Trump administration’s warnings of an imminent threat from Iran, it took an afternoon.

On Capitol Hill on Monday, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, swiftly undercut the Trump administration’s claims that Iran was planning a preemptive strike by adding a key piece of information: Israel was planning to strike first.

“We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action, we knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces, and we knew that if we didn’t preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties,” Rubio said on Tuesday.

There were two corollaries from that bombshell behind the largest US military intervention in a generation. First, that senior US officials had misled the public on Saturday when they warned of intelligence about Iran’s plans to launch a preemptive strike. And second, that Israel and Benjamin Netanyahu played a far larger role in prompting the US to launch strikes against Iran than was previously admitted.

Democrats, predictably, were apoplectic. “There was no imminent threat to the United States of America by the Iranians,” said Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate intelligence committee, who had received classified briefings from Rubio. “There was a threat to Israel. If we equate a threat to Israel as the equivalent of an imminent threat to the United States, then we are in uncharted territory.”

“I think secretary Rubio inadvertently told the truth here that this was driven by Benjamin Netanyahu and here we are in a major conflict,” said senator Angus King as he grilled Elbridge Colby, a Pentagon official in charge of policy planning.

The administration has been understandably prickly about the accusation that Netanyahu lobbied Trump into this latest war. (His press secretary Karoline Leavitt retweeted an article with the helpful headline: No, Marco Rubio Didn’t Claim That Israel Dragged Trump into War with Iran).

“I think they were going to attack first, and I didn’t want that to happen. So, if anything, I might have forced Israel’s hand,” Trump said while speaking to reporters in the Oval Office. “We were having negotiations with these lunatics, and it was my opinion that they [Iran] were going to attack first.”

'They were going to attack first': Trump gives update on Iran – video

Since Trump began mustering his “armada” in the Middle East in the largest buildup since the Iraq war, the administration has run through a number of justifications for the attack on Iran. And it still doesn’t seem to have settled on why the US is now at war.

It began with Trump’s claims that he was sending warships to the Middle East because of Iran’s crackdown on pro-democracy protesters, which he said had killed 35,000 people (other estimates have been more conservative).

Then it was the Iranian nuclear programme, which US special envoy Steve Witkoff claimed had reconstituted itself since it was “obliterated” last summer and could allow Iran to develop a nuclear weapon within a week.

Then it was Iran’s ballistic weapons programme, which Trump claimed could soon deliver a strike not just against US interests in the region, but also against the US itself. He didn’t provide evidence, and US intelligence estimates had said the opposite: that Tehran wouldn’t have that capability for at least a decade.

Most recently, it was the warning that Iran was planning for an imminent strike, which Trump said was not linked to the negotiations at all.“

Election Updates: James Talarico Wins Democratic Senate Primary in Texas

 

Pinned

Here’s what happened.

James Talarico, a state representative and seminarian, won the Democratic Senate primary in Texas on Tuesday, according to The Associated Press, prevailing over Representative Jasmine Crockett in a race that drew record early turnout and was roiled by Election Day rule changes. On the Republican side, Senator John Cornyn and Ken Paxton, the hard-right, scandal-plagued state attorney general, were headed to a runoff in May.

In the Democratic race, voter confusion in Dallas County — the state’s second most populous and Ms. Crockett’s base of support — prompted a flurry of legal activity. “I can tell you now that people have been disenfranchised,” Ms. Crockett told supporters at her election night gathering.

A judge ordered polling places in the county to remain open an extra two hours after a change in voting rules left some voters befuddled about where to cast their ballots, but the state’s Supreme Court later blocked the order. The higher court said that votes “cast by voters who were not in line to vote at 7 p.m. should be separated.”

It was not clear whether Ms. Crockett would dispute the result. “I have no idea how it is that clerks are going to know who was in line by what time,” she said at her election night event, before saying she would have not further comment on Tuesday night. (Paul Adams, the Dallas County election administrator, said officials are trained to mark the last person in line at 7 p.m. in any election.)

North Carolina and Arkansas also held primaries on Tuesday, kicking off this year’s midterms and offering early clues about the direction of both major parties. In North Carolina, Roy Cooper, a former Democratic governor, and Michael Whatley, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee, won their primaries in another closely watched race that could decide control of the Senate in November.

Other notable races involved House members from both major parties in Texas who were fighting to maintain their seats. Representative Dan Crenshaw of Texas became the first sitting member to fall in a primary this midterm election season.

Mr. Crenshaw, the only House Republican incumbent seeking re-election in Texas who did not have President Trump’s endorsement, lost to Steve Toth, a state legislator who criticized him for breaking with the president on some issues.

Here’s what else to know:

  • Reporting the results: Here’s how The New York Times brings you the latest vote totals and estimates of the outcome on political races around the country. Read more ›

  • Key race in N.C.: A primary race for the State Senate seat in North Carolina held by Phil Berger, widely considered the most powerful Republican politician in the state, remained too close to call. But that did not stop Mr. Berger’s challenger, Sam Page, a small-town sheriff steeped in President Trump’s political movement, from declaring victory. Read more ›

  • Tejano singer wins: Bobby Pulido, a moderate Democrat and Latin Grammy Award-winning Tejano singer, won his House primary in South Texas, fending off a candidate running to his left. He will face Representative Monica De La Cruz in November. Read more ›

  • Democratic hopes: The party has seen these dynamics before in Texas: An unpopular Republican president, well-funded Democrats and anecdotes of disaffected G.O.P. and independent voters. But no Democrat has won a statewide election in Texas since 1994. This year, Mr. Talarico and Ms. Crockett have offered two different theories of how to end the party’s long losing streak. Read more ›

  • House races to watch: Democrats are playing defense on a redrawn House map in Texas, while incumbents in both parties face fierce primary challenges in Texas and North Carolina.“