The Denver Post

On job since April, McAleenan out as secretary

- By Josh Dawsey and Nick Miroff

WASHINGTON» President Donald Trump said Friday night that he is replacing Kevin McAleenan, the acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, after a tenure in which McAleenan reduced border crossings and shepherded major Trump administra­tion immigratio­n policies but clashed with other senior officials and struggled to earn the president’s trust.

“Kevin McAleenan has done an outstandin­g job as Acting Secretary of Homeland Security. We have worked well together with Border Crossings being way down. Kevin now, after many years in Government, wants to spend more time with his family and go to the private sector,” Trump said of his top immigratio­n official in a tweet.

McAleenan had become increasing­ly frustrated with a cadre of Trump’s appointmen­ts to senior immigratio­n roles, and he recently told The Washington Post that he was struggling to control the messaging coming out of his department. More

hard-line figures have attacked him as insufficie­ntly committed to the president’s immigratio­n agenda, while critics of the administra­tion’s policies argue McAleenan has used conciliato­ry rhetoric to lend cover to harsh measures.

Trump in turn had questioned whether McAleenan was loyal to him.

A person close to McAleenan said he resigned Friday after weeks of growing disenchant­ment with his standing in the administra­tion. He was never formally nominated for the job, and there was no indication he would be.

McAleenan, who focused his tenure on addressing what he has characteri­zed as an immigratio­n system at the breaking point, recounted his accomplish­ments in a statement Friday night. He also thanked the president for the opportunit­y to serve “alongside the men and women of the Department of Homeland Security.”

“With his support, over the last 6 months, we have made tremendous progress mitigating the border security and humanitari­an crisis we faced this year, by reducing unlawful crossings, partnering with government­s in the region to counter human smugglers and address the causes of migration, and deploy additional border security resources,” McAleenan said in the statement.

In an interview with The Washington Post last week, McAleenan said that while he had maintained operationa­l control of his department and its agencies, he felt he had lost the ability to shape how the Trump administra­tion characteri­zed immigratio­n enforcemen­t. A career law enforcemen­t official, McAleenan had tried to present a relatively neutral approach to the border and felt that political partisansh­ip was taking over.

“What I don’t have control over is the tone, the message, the public face and approach of the department in an increasing­ly polarized time,” McAleenan said in the interview. “That’s uncomforta­ble, as the accountabl­e, senior figure.”

Ken Cuccinelli, acting director of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, is viewed as a potential replacemen­t for McAleenan. The former Virginia attorney general has distinguis­hed himself in the role by making frequent television appearance­s during which he often weighs in on the affairs of other DHS agencies, appearing at times as a more eager spokesman for the president’s immigratio­n policies than McAleenan.

But acrimony between Cuccinelli and leading GOP senators would be a major obstacle to his confirmati­on, and the administra­tion would have to perform a series of bureaucrat­ic maneuvers to go outside the order of succession to leapfrog him into the acting secretary role.

Whoever Trump picks to replace McAleenan will be the fifth DHS chief in less than three years, an unpreceden­ted level of turmoil at the top of a department that was created to project stability and to safeguard the nation through careful coordinati­on across the government.

Under Trump, the DHS secretary position has morphed into a border cop role. One administra­tion official remarked recently that former acting DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen — whom McAleenan replaced — spent 80% of her time on immigratio­n, but McAleenan spends 99% of his time on the issue.

McAleenan’s tenure at DHS was marked by the implementa­tion of several contentiou­s border policies that have significan­tly tightened access to the U.S. asylum system — policies he has defended as necessary to “restore integrity” to a U.S. immigratio­n system swamped with a backlog of nearly 1 million pending cases. He was vocal in declaring that the U.S. immigratio­n system was at a breaking point earlier this year as a crush of Central American migrant families streamed to the border seeking asylum, and he has advocated for agreements with other countries that would shift the burden of accepting asylees away from the United States.

McAleenan has been more isolated in recent weeks after the departure of several top aides and close allies. In addition, his relationsh­ips have been strained with other senior figures, especially Mark Morgan, the acting commission­er of Customs and Border Protection, and Cuccinelli.

The acting secretary’s exit leaves the bare-bones leadership structure at DHS even thinner. Every major immigratio­n agency is run by leaders in acting roles.

DHS was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and previous presidents have placed a high priority on having a Senateconf­irmed leader running the department, which has 240,000 employees and a $50 billion annual budget.

Trump, who has said he prefers leaving top officials in “acting” roles to make it easier to remove them, left McAleenan in the job without a nomination for six months, longer than any other previous DHS chief.

DHS’s acting deputy secretary, David Pekoske, is next in line to succeed McAleenan. Pekoske, who also is the top official at the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, is the only other senior DHS leader who has been confirmed by the Senate.

Unlike McAleenan, Pekoske does not have a background in immigratio­n enforcemen­t, and he has told others he would like to return to his job running TSA full time.

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