Senate committee approves Trump nominee Markwayne Mullin to lead DHS, heads for full vote – live | Trump administration


Senate committee approves Mullin to lead DHS, heads to floor for full vote

The Senate committee that held a confirmation hearing for Markwayne Mullin to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), approved Trump’s nomination, creating a glide path for his confirmation when the full chamber casts its votes in the coming days.

Notably, Republican senator Rand Paul, who chairs the Senate homeland committee voted against Mullin’s confirmation, after they continued to clash during Wednesday’s hearing. Meanwhile, Democratic senator John Fetterman supported Mullin’s nomination.

“My AYE is rooted in a strong committed, constructive working relationship with Senator Mullin for our nation’s security,” Fetterman said in a statement.

Key events

Democrat Elizabeth Warren is now the fourth senator to endorse Graham Platner, the insurgent candidate running for the Democratic nomination for the US Senate in Maine.

Warren said that Platner has “inspired people with his populist agenda for a government on the side of working families – not the billionaires and giant corporations”.

Elizabeth Warren speaks to the media after attending a closed briefing of the Senate armed services committee on Operation Epic Fury, 10 March 2026. Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA

The Massachusetts lawmaker joins Bernie Sanders, the independent senator from Vermont, as well as Democrats Ruben Gallego of Arizona, and Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, in backing Platner.

An oyster farmer and former marine, Platner has raised substantial cash on his run to oust incumbent Susan Collins – the moderate Republican lawmaker who has represented Maine in the Senate since 1997. Throughout his campaign he’s decried the “establishment political system that serves the interests of the ultra wealthy”.

Graham Platner speaks at a town hall in Ogunquit, Maine, 22 October 2025. Photograph: Caleb Jones/AP

In June, however, Platner will face off against the state’s governor, Janet Mills, in the Democratic primary.

It’s a hotly contested election for a seat that Democrats are confident they can pick up in this year’s midterms, to ultimately claw back more control in the upper chamber of Congress.

Platner, a political outsider who is making his first foray into public office, has set his campaign in contrast to that of Mills – an established political voice in Maine.

In the last six months, however, multiple controversies from Platner’s past have come to light, and he’s been embattled in a morass of damage control while. In October, there were a steady drip of reports featuring Platner’s unearthed racist, sexist and homophobic online comments. Then, Platner tried to get ahead of the story when he revealed, and then covered, a tattoo on his chest that closely resembles a Nazi symbol.

This week, Mills continued spotlight Platner’s internet history and launched an ad that featured women reacting to Platner’s 2013 Reddit post – where he said that survivors and victims of sexual assault should “take some responsibility for themselves and not get so fucked up”.

In November, Platner told the Guardian that Collins is the “charade of fake moderation”, and argued that Mills is running the “same kind of old-fashioned campaign” that won’t be enough to offer lasting change.

“The reason that I am in the race is because I don’t believe that the governor and I have the same politics,” said in an interview. “People go into power and then don’t try to do anything big. Everything is like playing around in the margins. I think that that is the kind of politics that comes out of someone who’s been in this system for as long as the governor has.”



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