Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) spent his entire portion of questioning Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem asking her to explain how she spent taxpayer funding on deals that appeared to benefit her allies, as well as how she described a Minnesota man fatally shot by federal police.
Kennedy pushed Noem to explain why she was featured “prominently” in $220 million worth of advertisements urging illegal immigrants in the United States to self-deport.
“Sir, the president tasked me with getting the message out to the country and to other countries where we were seeing the invasion come from with with putting commercials out that told them that if they were in this country illegally, that they needed to leave, or we would detain them and remove them,” Noem said.
Noem stated twice that she and President Donald Trump “had [a] conversation” about spending such a large amount of DHS funding on ads.
“The president approved ahead of time you spending $220 million running TV ads across the country in which you are featured prominently?” Kennedy asked, adding that he doubted the White House Office of Management and Budget would have approved the expenditure.
Noem pushed back and said it would “be helpful to know … how effective that communications [sic] has been.”
Kennedy was not satisfied with Noem’s response. The GOP senator said the ads had been “effective in your name recognition,” suggesting they were intended to promote Noem’s name.
“My research shows that you did not bid them out — that you picked, in fact, one of the people you picked, the Strategy Group. I’m sorry, Safe America Media was a company formed 11 days before you picked them, and that the strategy group got most of the money, and the head of that is married to your former spokesperson [Tricia McLaughlin],” Kennedy said.
“Look, we all have friends who are qualified. I’m not quibbling with that. I’m just, it troubles me,” Kennedy said. “Quarter of a billion dollars in taxpayer money when we’re scratching for every penny, and we’re fighting over decision packages.
Noem insisted that she had not selected McLaughlin’s husband’s firm and that “career officials at the department chose” who won the contract.
“I did not have anything to do with picking those contractors,” Noem said.
Noem said the ads were slated to run in March.