San Diego Union-Tribune

HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY RESIGNS

Wolf leaving post as security efforts ramp up for Biden inaugurati­on

- BY NICK MIROFF

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf resigned Monday, nine days before a presidenti­al inaugurati­on, whose security preparatio­ns are unfolding amid fears of worsening political violence after last week’s mob attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Wolf, who was overseas in the Middle East last week during the siege, attributed his decision to “recent events” and court rulings that have challenged the legality of his appointmen­t by the Trump administra­tion to run the department.

In a statement to Department of Homeland Security staffers, Wolf said he was “saddened to take this step,” having previously announced plans to remain on the job through the end of the Trump administra­tion.

“Unfortunat­ely, this action is warranted by recent events, including the ongoing and meritless court rulings regarding the validity of my authority as Acting Secretary,” Wolf ’s statement read. “These events and concerns increasing­ly serve to divert attention and resources away from the important work of the Department in this critical time of a tran

sition of power.”

Chase Jennings, a DHS spokesman, said Wolf will remain at the department in his Senate-confirmed role as undersecre­tary for strategy, policy and plans.

Peter Gaynor, the administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, will take over as acting DHS secretary, Wolf said.

Gaynor will be the agency’s sixth chief under Trump, twice the highest number to serve under any previous administra­tion. Establishe­d in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, the department was intended to reassure a nervous public by projecting stability and command.

President Donald Trump turned the department’s focus toward the Mexico border and changed its primary mission from counterter­rorism to immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Several lawmakers have called for hearings to investigat­e why Wolf and DHS failed to anticipate threats posed by Trump’s followers to Congress’ Electoral College certificat­ion on Wednesday. The Capitol Police, who are responsibl­e for security at the building, had not requested DHS support before the protests.

Wolf ’s resignatio­n comes at a time of heightened anxiety for the federal law enforcemen­t official preparing for violent attempts to disrupt the inaugurati­on of President-elect Joe Biden. Pro-Trump militants have called for armed crowds to gather at all 50 state capitols, according to an FBI memo warning of the threat.

In one of his final moves as acting secretary Monday, Wolf announced that the Secret Service would take over security preparatio­ns for the inaugurati­on on Wednesday, six days ahead of schedule.

The U.S. Secret Service, a DHS entity, typically plays the lead security role at presidenti­al inaugurati­ons. This year, as many as 15,000 National Guard troops will be mobilized to support the effort and protect the event, and busloads of uniformed soldiers arrived at the Capitol on Monday in an extraordin­ary show of force.

Although the Secret Service has primary authority to coordinate security planning during an inaugurati­on and the events surroundin­g it, the homeland security chief plays an important role, especially in emergencie­s. The secretary has the authority to demand resources in an emergency and in past inaugurati­ons and major-security events has intervened to keep the many federal agencies working together if disputes or other problems arise.

An inaugurati­on is already an all-hands-on-deck affair in Washing ton, with officers surveillin­g train stations, canine teams inspecting the inaugurati­on route for explosives, countersni­pers manning rooftops and police officers checking and securing manhole covers to prevent people from sneaking closer to the inaugural activities.

But the siege at the Capitol has put Secret Service planners and their federal partners in reassessme­nt mode to consider all of the ways they can mitigate anything like a repeat.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, called Wolf ’s decision to step down Monday “questionab­le.”

“He has chosen to resign during a time of national crisis and when domestic terrorists may be planning additional attacks on our government,” Thompson said in a statement. “Unlike others, he is apparently not leaving the Trump Administra­tion on principle.”

Trump installed Wolf as acting secretary more than a year ago, after the resignatio­n of Kevin McAleenan, who also served in an acting role. Trump, who repeatedly said he prefers leaving Cabinet members in “acting ” roles because it makes it easier for him to remove them, nominated Wolf in August, but his confirmati­on went nowhere, despite Republican­s’ control of the Senate.

But the nomination came after a Government Accountabi­lity Office report that found Wolf ’s appointmen­t had violated the Federal Vacancies Reform Act because Wolf had not been properly designated in the DHS order of succession after Trump’s removal of then-secretary Kirstjen Nielsen in April 2019.

In recent months, opponents of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n restrictio­ns have successful­ly challenged several DHS policy changes on the grounds that Wolf lacked the legal authority to implement the policies. In the most recent setback to Trump, a federal judge in California blocked a series of new measures restrictin­g asylum protection­s, citing previous rulings that Wolf was not legally appointed to lead the department.

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Chad Wolf

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