The Record (Troy, NY)

With DHS head departing, unclear who will be in charge

- By Colleen Long and Jill Colvin Associated Press

WASHINGTON » A day before the acting Homeland Security secretary is set to leave his job, it remains unclear who will be tapped to run the sprawling agency tasked with national security, disaster response and protection of the president and his family.

Kevin McAleenan, the fourth man to hold the job, had told colleagues that he would be departing Thursday. While he could choose to stay on, a goodbye party to fete him was to take place on Wednesday afternoon.

“I’m not going to discuss any pre-decisional personnel matters,” McAleenan told a House Committee Wednesday when asked about plans for the department. Still, he said he was prepared to stay on if asked.

“If necessaril­y, I’ll absolutely ensure a smooth transition,” he said.

For weeks, various factions have been looking for legal blocks and workaround­s as they spar over who is eligible to succeed McAleenan in the role. Federal vacancy rules that place restrictio­ns on the position had been thought to bar immigratio­n hardliner Ken Cuccinelli, currently the acting head of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, and Mark Morgan, the current acting commission­er of U. S. Customs and Border Protection, from taking the job.

But officials have recently identified a “loophole” in which Trump could appoint otherwise eligible individual­s by first tapping them to lead the Countering Weapons of Mass Destructio­n Office — a post that is vacant. The discovery of the workaround was first reported by The New York Times.

In addition to Cuccinelli and Morgan, the White House has also been weighing Chad Wolf, former chief of staff to ex- Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, as a possible McAleenan successor. Another name that has been mentioned is Kenneth Rapuano, a longtime counterter­rorism who is currently the assistant secre

tary of defense for homeland defense and global security, and previously served as deputy homeland security adviser to President George W. Bush.

That is according to more than a half dozen current and former administra­tion officials and people close to the White House who spoke on condition to anonymity in order to discuss private deliberati­ons.

The sprawling 240,000-person Department of Homeland Security oversees a huge portfolio that includes election and cyber security, disaster response, child traffickin­g investigat­ions, the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Secret Service.

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