

WASHINGTON: President-elect Donald Trump's planned immigration crackdown emerged as a top theme at a US Senate confirmation hearing for South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, his choice for secretary of Homeland Security and a Republican who mirrors his hardline views.
Noem, who would lead the 260,000-employee department after Trump takes office on Monday, said she would work to reinstate Trump's "remain in Mexico" programme, which forced non-Mexican migrants to wait in Mexico while pursuing US asylum cases.
She also said she would immediately end an app-based Biden legal entry programme known as CBP One that has allowed hundreds of thousands of migrants to enter legally since 2023.
"If confirmed and I have the opportunity to be secretary, on Day One, CBP One will be shut down," Noem told the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. "There's several of these programmes that need to be eliminated."
Trump, also a Republican, is expected to take a flurry of executive actions immediately after taking office to deter illegal immigration and increase deportations.
Trump says aggressive moves are needed after high levels of illegal immigration under Democratic President Joe Biden, although the number of migrants caught crossing has fallen dramatically in recent months as Biden toughened his approach.
Noem, if confirmed, would be in charge of the department that oversees border security, deportations and legal immigration paperwork as well as emergency response, cybersecurity and the US Coast Guard and Secret Service.
She would take the job with little national security experience. As governor of South Dakota, Noem, 53, was closer to America’s border with Canada than with Mexico. But she deployed dozens of South Dakota National Guard troops to assist the Republican-led state of Texas with border security in recent years, including one controversial deployment in 2021 funded by a Republican billionaire.
"We have the right and responsibility to secure our borders against those who would do us harm," she told the committee. "And we must create a fair and lawful immigration system that is efficient and effective and that reflects our values."
If confirmed, she could find herself thrust into a debate among Trump allies about whether legal immigration should be restricted.
Noem's family ranch, the Racota Valley Ranch Partnership in Hazel, South Dakota, has requested 59 H-2A visas for temporary agricultural workers since 2015, according to previously unreported US Citizenship and Immigration Services data.
Oman Observer is now on the WhatsApp channel. Click here