---
title: "DHS Nominee Mullin Rejects Plans to Eliminate FEMA, Offers Softer Emergency-Management Vision"
date: 2026-03-19
modified: 2026-03-20
author: ""
url: https://panamadaily.news/2026/03/19/mullin-fema-stance/
categories:
  - "Politics"
  - "World"
tags:
  - "DHS"
  - "FEMA"
  - "Mullin"
  - "Noem"
  - "Senate confirmation"
---

# DHS Nominee Mullin Rejects Plans to Eliminate FEMA, Offers Softer Emergency-Management Vision

## What Happened

President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Homeland Security, Mullin, told senators at his confirmation hearing that he would not pursue eliminating the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). He presented a noticeably softer approach to federal emergency management than his predecessor and said he would move to undo some of that predecessor’s unpopular policies.

## Details From the Hearing

At the Senate confirmation hearing, Mullin clarified his stance on the role of FEMA within DHS, explicitly rejecting the idea of dismantling the agency. He framed his approach as a departure from the direction taken by his predecessor, Noem, and promised to roll back certain policies from that tenure which he described as unpopular with stakeholders.

## Background

The hearing comes as Congress considers whether to confirm Mullin for the DHS secretary role. The exchange highlighted differing visions within the department for how FEMA should operate and be integrated into federal emergency-response frameworks. Lawmakers pressed the nominee on how he would balance federal capabilities with state and local responsibilities during disasters and crises.

## What This Means

Mullin’s public commitment to keep FEMA intact signals continuity for one of the federal government’s primary disaster-response agencies, even as leadership and policy priorities shift. For countries and communities in the region, including those in Latin America and Panama that interact with U.S. emergency agencies for disaster relief and coordination, a promise to maintain FEMA could mean steadier channels for collaboration, though specific impacts will depend on policy implementation.

The nominee’s pledge to reverse some of his predecessor’s policies suggests an early policy reset at DHS if he is confirmed. Senators will weigh those assurances alongside other considerations as they decide whether to approve his nomination.