⏱ 5 minute read
A tense Senate Judiciary hearing on Tuesday exposed something deeper than a Republican rift.
It revealed the structural problem at the heart of modern American governance: too much power concentrated in too few hands, with too little accountability.
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) did not mince words when it was his turn to speak. Citing reports of mismanaged deportations, fatal law enforcement encounters, and what he described as a lack of accountability within the Department of Homeland Security, Tillis called Secretary Kristi Noem’s tenure a “disaster.” He suggested the department needs stronger leadership and even floated blocking certain Senate nominations until more information is provided.
That’s not routine oversight. It’s a member of the president’s own party signaling that something is wrong.
But this isn’t just about Kristi Noem.
It’s about what happens when federal agencies grow so large, so powerful, and so insulated that internal failures become inevitable.
The DHS Problem: Size, Scope, and Secrecy
The Department of Homeland Security was born in crisis after 9/11. It was designed to be expansive and meant to be powerful.
And it has become exactly that.
DHS now oversees immigration enforcement, border security, disaster response, cybersecurity, intelligence functions, and more. It commands vast resources and exercises significant discretion in areas that directly affect Americans’ liberty — from surveillance authorities to detention policies.
When deportations are mishandled or enforcement encounters turn fatal, the consequences aren’t abstract. They affect real lives and real rights.
Yet meaningful oversight is often reactive rather than proactive. Congress reacts after headlines appear. Agencies promise internal reviews. And the machine keeps moving.
That’s not a Kristi Noem problem.
That’s a structural power problem.
Character vs. Concentrated Authority
During the hearing, Tillis referenced a widely discussed episode from Noem’s 2024 memoir in which she described shooting a 14-month-old dog and later an aggressive goat. The episode became a political flashpoint last year, raising questions about judgment and temperament.
Some defended the episode as evidence of decisiveness, while most saw it as troubling.
But personality debates — however dramatic — risk overlooking the larger issue.
In Washington, we’ve built a system in which a single appointed official can preside over a sprawling security apparatus with enormous discretion. Whether that official is decisive, controversial, cautious, or combative becomes almost secondary.
Because the authority remains.
Liberty-minded Americans should be wary of that dynamic, no matter who occupies the office.
Intraparty Friction Is Not the Real Story
Other Republican senators, including Louisiana’s John Kennedy, have publicly questioned DHS policies, ranging from immigration enforcement to departmental spending.
Some observers frame this as party infighting.
It’s not.
That’s what oversight is supposed to look like.
When members of the president’s own party challenge a Cabinet secretary, that’s not disloyalty. It’s recognition that executive agencies are not extensions of political loyalty — they wield state power.
And state power must be restrained.
The Founders’ Warning
The Founders did not design a system in which massive federal agencies would operate with limited transparency and broad enforcement discretion.
They designed a system of separation of powers, competing ambitions, and jealous oversight.
But modern Washington often treats agencies as semi-permanent fixtures of authority, insulated from political consequences and shielded by complexity.
The danger isn’t simply bad leadership.
The danger is normalized concentration.
Today it’s DHS. Tomorrow it’s the Justice Department. Next week, it’s a regulatory body deciding what speech, commerce, or property rights are permissible.
Power never diminishes on its own.
The Real Test
If Sen. Tillis follows through on blocking nominations until answers are provided, that would be a small but meaningful assertion of legislative authority.
Congress controls the purse. It confirms appointments. It has investigative authority.
The question is whether lawmakers are willing to use those tools consistently — not just when controversy erupts, but as a matter of principle.
A government powerful enough to manage every border crossing, track digital threats, coordinate intelligence, and enforce sweeping federal mandates is a government that must face relentless oversight.
Otherwise, accountability becomes optional.
And when accountability becomes optional, liberty becomes conditional.
This Is Bigger Than One Hearing
The Judiciary hearing may fade from the headlines. Personnel disputes always do.
But the structural question remains:
How much authority should any one federal department hold?
And how often should Congress demand justification for how that authority is exercised?
If Americans want limited government in more than name, then scrutiny of DHS — and every other powerful federal agency — cannot be episodic.
It must be constant.
Because unchecked power doesn’t depend on who holds the office.
It depends on whether anyone is willing to restrain it.
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.
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A tense Senate Judiciary hearing on Tuesday exposed something deeper than a Republican rift.
It revealed the structural problem at the heart of modern American governance: too much power concentrated in too few hands, with too little accountability.
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) did not mince words when it was his turn to speak. Citing reports of mismanaged deportations, fatal law enforcement encounters, and what he described as a lack of accountability within the Department of Homeland Security, Tillis called Secretary Kristi Noem’s tenure a “disaster.” He suggested the department needs stronger leadership and even floated blocking certain Senate nominations until more information is provided.
That’s not routine oversight. It’s a member of the president’s own party signaling that something is wrong.
But this isn’t just about Kristi Noem.
It’s about what happens when federal agencies grow so large, so powerful, and so insulated that internal failures become inevitable.
The DHS Problem: Size, Scope, and Secrecy
The Department of Homeland Security was born in crisis after 9/11. It was designed to be expansive and meant to be powerful.
And it has become exactly that.
DHS now oversees immigration enforcement, border security, disaster response, cybersecurity, intelligence functions, and more. It commands vast resources and exercises significant discretion in areas that directly affect Americans’ liberty — from surveillance authorities to detention policies.
When deportations are mishandled or enforcement encounters turn fatal, the consequences aren’t abstract. They affect real lives and real rights.
Yet meaningful oversight is often reactive rather than proactive. Congress reacts after headlines appear. Agencies promise internal reviews. And the machine keeps moving.
That’s not a Kristi Noem problem.
That’s a structural power problem.
Character vs. Concentrated Authority
During the hearing, Tillis referenced a widely discussed episode from Noem’s 2024 memoir in which she described shooting a 14-month-old dog and later an aggressive goat. The episode became a political flashpoint last year, raising questions about judgment and temperament.
Some defended the episode as evidence of decisiveness, while most saw it as troubling.
But personality debates — however dramatic — risk overlooking the larger issue.
In Washington, we’ve built a system in which a single appointed official can preside over a sprawling security apparatus with enormous discretion. Whether that official is decisive, controversial, cautious, or combative becomes almost secondary.
Because the authority remains.
Liberty-minded Americans should be wary of that dynamic, no matter who occupies the office.
Intraparty Friction Is Not the Real Story
Other Republican senators, including Louisiana’s John Kennedy, have publicly questioned DHS policies, ranging from immigration enforcement to departmental spending.
Some observers frame this as party infighting.
It’s not.
That’s what oversight is supposed to look like.
When members of the president’s own party challenge a Cabinet secretary, that’s not disloyalty. It’s recognition that executive agencies are not extensions of political loyalty — they wield state power.
And state power must be restrained.
The Founders’ Warning
The Founders did not design a system in which massive federal agencies would operate with limited transparency and broad enforcement discretion.
They designed a system of separation of powers, competing ambitions, and jealous oversight.
But modern Washington often treats agencies as semi-permanent fixtures of authority, insulated from political consequences and shielded by complexity.
The danger isn’t simply bad leadership.
The danger is normalized concentration.
Today it’s DHS. Tomorrow it’s the Justice Department. Next week, it’s a regulatory body deciding what speech, commerce, or property rights are permissible.
Power never diminishes on its own.
The Real Test
If Sen. Tillis follows through on blocking nominations until answers are provided, that would be a small but meaningful assertion of legislative authority.
Congress controls the purse. It confirms appointments. It has investigative authority.
The question is whether lawmakers are willing to use those tools consistently — not just when controversy erupts, but as a matter of principle.
A government powerful enough to manage every border crossing, track digital threats, coordinate intelligence, and enforce sweeping federal mandates is a government that must face relentless oversight.
Otherwise, accountability becomes optional.
And when accountability becomes optional, liberty becomes conditional.
This Is Bigger Than One Hearing
The Judiciary hearing may fade from the headlines. Personnel disputes always do.
But the structural question remains:
How much authority should any one federal department hold?
And how often should Congress demand justification for how that authority is exercised?
If Americans want limited government in more than name, then scrutiny of DHS — and every other powerful federal agency — cannot be episodic.
It must be constant.
Because unchecked power doesn’t depend on who holds the office.
It depends on whether anyone is willing to restrain it.
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.
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Patrick Houck is an avid political enthusiast based out of the Washington, D.C., metro area. His expertise is in campaigns and the use of targeted messaging to persuade voters. When not combing through the latest news, you can find him enjoying the company of family and friends or pursuing his love of photography.
Sen. Ruben Gallego Moves to Challenge Trump Green Card Policy
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