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Trump Wanted to Abolish FEMA. His Own Advisers Disagree.

November 19, 2025
in News
Trump Wanted to Abolish FEMA. His Own Advisers Disagree.

A task force formed by President Trump to consider changes to the Federal Emergency Management Agency has recommended that it should not be abolished, according to four people briefed on the matter, a position that conflicts with Mr. Trump’s earlier assertion that the agency should “go away.”

It is unclear whether Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, will accept the task force’s suggestions, the people said. FEMA is part of the Department of Homeland Security.

The deliberations underscore a growing tension within Mr. Trump’s political coalition over the federal role in responding to hurricanes, floods, fires and other disasters across the country that are growing more destructive as the planet warms.

Democrats and Republicans agree that the agency is often slow and inefficient. But Republicans, who control Washington, have come to recognize that FEMA aid is crucial to disaster-struck communities and would be difficult, if not impossible, for state and local governments to replace.

Earlier this year Mr. Trump called for dismantling or drastically scaling down FEMA and shifting responsibility for disaster response to the states, saying governors should handle more emergencies on their own. In May, the administration pushed out Cameron Hamilton, then the acting FEMA administrator, a day after he told Congress that the agency should not be eliminated because it helped communities “in their greatest times of need.”

But in the wake of the July 4 floods that devastated the Texas Hill Country, Mr. Trump and his aides seemed to soften their rhetoric around FEMA. Mr. Trump said during a visit to the disaster zone in Texas that “some good people” were running the agency.

Many of the people appointed by the president to the FEMA task force hail from red states in the South that are vulnerable to hurricanes and reliant on FEMA aid. They include officials from Florida and Texas, two of the states that receive the most federal disaster assistance.

The task force has presented Ms. Noem with a draft report that calls for reforming but preserving the agency in some form, the four people briefed on the matter said. The panel failed to release its final report by Sunday as required by an executive order Mr. Trump issued in May.

The final report is now expected by the end of the year. It could ultimately suggest a compromise intended to appease the White House, such as renaming FEMA or eliminating the agency “as it exists today” or “in its current form,” two of the people briefed on the matter said.

In response to questions, Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Homeland Security Department, said in an email, “The FEMA Review Council has spent months working to provide recommendations to reshape and reform the bureaucratic mess that exists at FEMA. All council members have provided key insights, ideas and suggestions as their final report takes shape.”

Most of the members of the task force are Republicans, including Michael Whatley, the former chairman of the Republican National Committee. He is running for a Senate seat in North Carolina, which was battered by Hurricane Helene last year and is still waiting for some FEMA aid.

Through a spokeswoman, Mr. Whatley declined to comment on the contents of the report.

The draft report, which the Homeland Security Department declined to release to The New York Times, proposes changes to FEMA that would provide aid to states more quickly, according to the four people briefed on the matter. It also suggests that FEMA should not continue sending money to states a decade or more after a disaster has struck. And it floats the idea of restoring FEMA to a cabinet-level agency that answers directly to the president, as it did before 2003.

Ms. Noem is editing the draft report before presenting it to Mr. Trump and has reduced it to roughly 20 pages from around 100 pages, according to the people briefed on the matter. Ms. McLaughlin said that Ms. Noem, the chairwoman of the task force, had not altered the draft report’s findings.

The deliberations over the document come at a tumultuous time for FEMA.

David Richardson resigned on Monday as acting administrator of the agency after just six months on the job. Karen Evans, a senior political appointee at FEMA who earlier this year led an overhaul of the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, will take over as acting FEMA administrator on Dec. 1.

Ms. Evans, like Mr. Richardson, lacks experience in emergency management, which is a legal requirement to lead FEMA.

Mr. Richardson had told colleagues that he planned to leave the agency by the end of the year, according to three people familiar with his comments. But he resigned on Monday because officials in the White House and the Homeland Security Department were considering forcing him out of the job after the task force released its report, the people said.

Ultimately, while the Trump administration can restructure FEMA without congressional approval, eliminating the agency would require an act of Congress.

Yet on Capitol Hill, many Republicans have joined with Democrats to support legislation that would make FEMA a cabinet-level agency and reform its operations to move money more quickly to disaster-struck communities. A House committee voted, 57-3, to advance the measure in September.

Representative Sam Graves, Republican of Missouri and the lead sponsor of the bill, said earlier this month that he was optimistic the measure could eventually pass with White House support, despite Mr. Trump’s desire to dismantle FEMA, Federal News Network reported.

“We’ve got people on both sides bought into this process,” he said at an event hosted by Punchbowl News, adding, “FEMA is broken. The president knows it’s broken. So we’re instituting some real reforms.”

Maxine Joselow covers climate change and the environment for The Times from Washington.

The post Trump Wanted to Abolish FEMA. His Own Advisers Disagree. appeared first on New York Times.

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