Kristi Noem firing response pushed Trump to oust Pam Bondi: Byron York
Byron york of the Washington Examiner reports that Kristi Noem’s firing and Pam Bondi’s departure represent a broader, smoother cabinet reshuffle under Donald Trump, signaling that he can make changes without widespread upheaval.
– Noem was fired in March and replaced by Markwayne Mullin, following bipartisan criticisms over immigration enforcement, awarding government contracts, and FEMA.
– Bondi’s move to leave the governance makes her the second Cabinet-level official to be fired in roughly a month.
– York notes that Trump’s team views thes changes as manageable and not chaotic, saying the president has shown he can make changes “without hoopla” and that the new appointee was quickly confirmed in the Senate.
– He also emphasizes that the Cabinet has been comparatively stable in this term versus Trump’s first administration, despite the turnover.
– The piece points to ongoing speculation about who might be targeted next after Bondi and frames the shake-ups as signs of a more streamlined White House operation.
Kristi Noem firing response pushed Trump to oust Pam Bondi: Byron York
Washington Examiner chief political correspondent Byron York said the firing of former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem went “really well,” signaling to President Donald Trump he can make changes within his administration without any turmoil.
Trump announced on Thursday that Attorney General Pam Bondi was stepping down from the administration and moving into the private sector, following reports that the president was considering firing her.
“The president has seen he can make changes he wants without having a whole lot of hoopla,” York said Thursday on Fox News’s America Reports.
Bondi is the second Cabinet-level official that Trump has fired within the last month.
In March, Trump fired Noem and replaced her with then-Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), after weeks of bipartisan criticisms over her handling of immigration enforcement, awarding government contracts, and FEMA.
York said Noem’s firing “went really well” because things within the Department of Homeland Security are no longer a “big drama.”
“The president [fired Noem]. He found a good replacement. The replacement was quickly confirmed in the Senate,” York said. “Things are moving now, and they’re not a big drama.”
Leading up to both firings, the Trump administration had a “remarkably stable” Cabinet compared to his first administration, York said.
WHO COULD TRUMP REMOVE NEXT AFTER BONDI? CABINET SHAKE-UPS FUEL SPECULATION
York highlighted that at this time within the first Trump administration, the president had fired three Cabinet-level officials.
“There had been a lot of turnover [in Trump’s first administration] and a lot of comments this time around that it was a much more stable administration,” York said.
" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."



