- The Washington Times - Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem decried the use of deportation quotas, told Congress she has no plans to deploy ICE officers to the polls for this year’s elections, and took a conciliatory approach to angry lawmakers Tuesday by tacitly acknowledging her overzealous denunciations of Americans killed by her agents in Minneapolis.

In her first testimony since the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, Ms. Noem declined repeated invitations to apologize directly to their families for labeling their protests domestic terrorism, but extended her condolences.

She offered an explanation for her initial reactions. She said she was going by what her officers were telling her from the “chaotic scene.”



“We’re relying on reports on the ground and agents that are there, and [we] work to be transparent,” she told the Senate Judiciary Committee during four hours of questioning.

Several Republicans joined Democrats in criticizing Ms. Noem’s tenure as head of the Department of Homeland Security.

Sen. Thom Tillis, North Carolina Republican, said the department has been “a total disaster” under her leadership.

Sen. John Kennedy, Louisiana Republican, excoriated the secretary for her department’s approval of $220 million in contracts to run ads telling illegal immigrants to deport themselves. Ms. Noem prominently featured herself in the ads.

Mr. Kennedy was incredulous when Ms. Noem told him that President Trump had given her the OK to proceed with the ads.

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“We had that conversation, yes, before I was put in this position,” she said.

“To me,” countered Mr. Kennedy, “it puts the president in a terribly awkward spot. I’m not saying you’re not telling the truth; it’s just hard for me to believe.”

The ads and the department’s purchase of airplanes have added to Ms. Noem’s woes, particularly after photos of the interior of one plane showed a plush bedroom and lounge.

She said a law enacted by Congress required her to have a plane for command-and-control activities during emergencies and that she has flown on the jet only once. She said the plane is being refurbished so it can be used for deportations.

More broadly, she said the Homeland Security Department’s planned fleet of deportation planes would replace the costlier network of contract aircraft now used by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She said flight costs would be cut by 40%.

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“We have 737s that are being purchased by the department to replace contracts we have on ICE deportations,” she told the committee.

Senators on both sides of the aisle questioned why a portion of the $220 million in ad contracts ended up with a firm run by the husband of Tricia McLaughlin, who until last week was the secretary’s chief spokeswoman and before that assisted Ms. Noem with work when she was a candidate and governor in South Dakota.

Amid the questions, Ms. Noem celebrated the stunning turnaround at the border since Mr. Trump returned to the White House.

She said February marked the 10th straight month that the Border Patrol hasn’t caught and released a single migrant at the southwestern border. During the Biden administration, that tally regularly topped 100,000 a month.

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Ms. Noem said her department has deported 675,000 migrants, with an additional 2.5 million having left the U.S. through their own devices, or self-deported.

Ms. Noem said her agents and officers have secured 400,000 administrative arrest warrants to take migrants into custody for deportation purposes.

In 28 of those cases, she said, officers used the warrants to enter private homes.

She defended the practice as legal. She said Congress created the administrative warrant rather than a judicial warrant for immigration cases.

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“It’s the legal process we have that we follow,” she said.

The pace of deportations irked Democrats and Mr. Tillis, who said she was chasing big numbers, leading to some excesses.

“Quality matters, not quantity,” Mr. Tillis said.

He compared her handling of the shooting deaths in Minneapolis to her own tale in her memoir of killing her 14-month-old dog, Cricket, and an unruly goat.

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She had cast those as examples of tough leadership decisions, but Mr. Tillis said the animal slayings were uncalled for and reflected Ms. Noem’s inability to anticipate situations.

“Those are bad decisions made in the heat of the moment — not unlike what happened up in Minnesota,” he said.

Several senators confronted Ms. Noem with the comments of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, who said he wanted 1 million deportations a year.

Ms. Noem responded that her agency isn’t pursuing numbers.

“We don’t have any quotas on our law enforcement officers,” she said.

Several senators prodded Ms. Noem on comments by Trump confidant Stephen Bannon, who said he hoped ICE officers would be deployed at polling places this year.

“There are no plans to have ICE officers at our polling locations,” Ms. Noem said.

She celebrated the work of Homeland Security Investigations agents, who she said have located 145,000 migrants who came to the U.S. as children and got “lost” by the previous administration.

• Stephen Dinan can be reached at sdinan@washingtontimes.com.

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