Trump urges cuts at Office of National Intelligence

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Trump said he wanted acting intelligence chief Bill Pulte to shrink the office and begin firing employees.

Why this matters

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence oversees 18 intelligence agencies, so changes to its staffing and leadership can affect intelligence operations and congressional action on surveillance authorities.

President Donald Trump said Friday that he wanted Bill Pulte, his new acting director of national intelligence, to reduce the size of the office, which had already been scaled back during Trump’s second term.

Trump said the office had been “way too high for way too long” and added, “if he cut, I wouldn’t mind that.”

“He’ll do a very good job,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One as he traveled to Wisconsin for an agriculture event. “He’ll watch it closely, but Bill Pulte is very good, he’s very talented.”

In an earlier interview with The Wall Street Journal, Trump said he had asked Pulte to begin firing employees. Trump said, “I’d like to see it smaller. I think there are a lot of people in there that shouldn’t be there,” which the Journal said referred to intelligence officials who had served in the Democratic administrations of Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Obama.

Trump told the Journal that he wanted Pulte to “start the process” of firing personnel and said the eventual permanent director of national intelligence should continue it. Trump has said he does not plan to formally nominate Pulte for the position.

“Frankly, it might be good for him to shake it up before people come,” Trump said. “Because, if he (Pulte) reduced the size, in conjunction with me … and in conjunction with possibly the person coming in … he can do a lot of the hard work and we wouldn’t have to saddle somebody that goes in.”

Pulte, who has led the Federal Housing Finance Agency, was appointed earlier this week. His temporary appointment has complicated renewal of a national security surveillance program in Congress, with Democrats whose votes are important to the measure saying they did not trust Pulte, whose office oversees 18 intelligence agencies, to help administer it.

Trump said Pulte would remain in the role until a successor is confirmed. He said he was considering five candidates who were “all very good, all people that you know very well, all people that do that kind of thing.”

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