Cameron Hamilton’s ouster wasn’t just a personnel change; it was a warning shot.
A former Navy SEAL who had already considered resigning, he chose instead to defend a federal lifeline he believed Americans still needed.
One day after publicly rejecting the idea of eliminating FEMA, he was dismissed by top Homeland Security officials and a senior Trump adviser.
At the same time, the administration seized on a scandal over FEMA-funded luxury hotels for migrants,
vowing clawbacks and mass firings, while using that outrage to justify a radical overhaul—or outright abolition—of the agency.
Trump promised faster, cheaper, state-run disaster responses, blaming FEMA’s failures on the
Biden era and hinting that Washington would “take over” recovery in places like hurricane-ravaged North Carolina.
Between Hamilton’s defiance and Trump’s determination, the country is now caught between two starkly different visions of who shows up when everything is already gone.