EXCLUSIVE ā Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has tentatively agreed to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee in February but is at a crossroads with Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), the panel chairman, over the length of her testimony.
āSheās willing to come, but she wanted to limit it to one five-minute round, and we wonāt stand for that,ā Grassley told the Washington Examiner on Tuesday, referring to the amount of time each committee member gets to question Noem.
āWeāre willing to listen on the number of rounds, but not something at five minutes,ā Grassley added, noting that Attorney General Pam Bondi sat for 10 minutes of questioning per senator in an October 2025 hearing.
Noemās testimony is of particular interest to Democrats on the Judiciary Committee after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer fatally shot a woman in MinneapolisĀ last week, but she has also irked Republicans for not appearing once last year before the panel, despite two separate requests from Grassley.
He took the unusual step of publicly rebuking Noem in December, warning that he expects ābetter cooperationā from her in the new year, and on Tuesday said that he has been in touch with the White House about her perceived foot-dragging.
The impasse became so severe that Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC), a Republican member of the committee, said in January that he would move to hold up all Department of Homeland Security nominees until a hearing is on the books.
āAs soon as that gets scheduled, we can move on from there, but itās got to be scheduled, and weāve got to see follow-through,ā Tillis said, calling it an āunforced errorā not to cooperate with Grassley, the president pro tempore of the Senate.
It is common for the administration to haggle over the length of time a Cabinet secretary will sit for testimony, according to a Senate GOP aide familiar with committee procedure, but five minutes is considered short, and Noem has been generally reluctant to field questions.
āThe date isnāt a problem right now,ā Grassley saidĀ in disclosing the February date. āThe length of questioning is a problem.ā
NOEM CHANGES PROTOCOL FOR LAWMAKER OVERSIGHT OF ICE AFTER MINNESOTA SHOOTING
Noem sat for testimony before the House Homeland Security Committee in December but faced criticism for leaving early.
DHS did not respond to a request for comment by press time.