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Sources say Trump will appoint a government contracting expert as the new TSA head.

Two sources said on Thursday that President Donald Trump plans to nominate a business executive with extensive experience in government contracts as the head of the Transportation Security Administration.

Trump is planning to hire?David Cummins. He oversees Serco North America's federal, state and local government customer portfolio. Trump had proposed earlier this month to privatize much of the TSA operations and cut nearly 10,000 workers.

Trump has not nominated anyone to replace David Pekoske as TSA head since his first day of office in 2025. Pekoske was nominated by Trump during his first term and Joe Biden, the former president, nominated him to serve a second 5-year term.

The government shutdown that lasted six weeks in the spring caused major disruptions including long airport security lines of four or more hours.

Trump's budget proposes cutting TSA more than $1.5 billion. It also wants to force smaller airports to use private security in place of TSA, as a step towards privatizing this agency that was created after September 11, 2001.

The White House stated that this change will reduce the TSA's payroll by over 4,500 jobs. TSA plans to eliminate 4,800 more jobs through improved efficiency, eliminating redundant staffing and reducing exit lanes.

Employee reductions would save over $500 million.

TSA has lost over 1,600 employees due to government funding disruptions last fall and this spring.

The Biden administration grew the TSA. The TSA screened 904 millions passengers in 2024. This was a record-breaking number and an increase of 5% over 2023.

The White House stated last year that "TSA has consistently been failing audits, while implementing intrusive screen measures which violate Americans' dignity and privacy."

In September, Homeland Security announced that it would remove five senior officials for suspicions of targeting Biden's political rivals with an aviation security watchlist now abolished.

The TSA's Quiet Skies program, which was scrapped in late June, required an enhanced screening of some air passengers who were deemed to pose a greater security risk. (Reporting and Editing by Franklin Paul and Rod Nickel, Rod Nickel, David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)