FEMA Head David Richardson Resigns
FEMA Head David Richardson Resigns
David Richardson, the acting head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, is stepping down, according to a senior Trump administration official, ending a troubled tenure just six months into the job and while the Atlantic hurricane season is underway.
Richardson, a former Marine Corps officer, is the second FEMA head to leave or be fired since May. He departs amid criticism that he kept a low profile during deadly Texas floods in July that killed 130 people and baffled staff in June when he said he was unaware the country had a hurricane season.
The Trump administration official familiar with Richardson’s departure, which was first reported by the Washington Post, gave no reasons for the FEMA chief stepping down.
It was not immediately clear who Richardson’s successor will be.
Richardson’s predecessor was fired in May, after pushing back against Trump administration efforts to dismantle the agency. President Donald Trump has said he wants to greatly reduce the size of FEMA — the federal agency responsible for preparing for and responding to natural disasters — saying state governments can handle many of its functions.
The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees FEMA, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
FEMA plays a central role in the U.S. response to major disasters, including hurricanes. The Atlantic hurricane season is due to end this month.
Richardson kept a low public profile compared with FEMA leaders under previous presidents, appearing rarely in public. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has served as the face of the administration’s response to natural disasters during Trump’s second term.
Richardson’s abrupt departure is an ignominious end for an official who told staff when he first arrived in May that he would “run right over” anyone who resists changes and that all decisions must now go through him.
“I, and I alone in FEMA, speak for FEMA,” he said at the time.
FEMA has lost about 2,500 employees since January through buyouts, firings and other incentives for staff to quit, reducing its overall size to about 23,350, according to a September Government Accountability Office report.
The cuts are part of Trump’s broader push to cut the cost and size of the federal civilian workforce.
Trump Backs Vote to Release Epstein Files
Nov 17, 2025
2 min
8-Year-Old Girl Killed by Migrant Driver
Nov 17, 2025
2 min
Thomas Crooks Used ‘They/Them’ Pronouns
Nov 17, 2025
3 min
Supreme Court to Review Border Asylum Case
Nov 17, 2025
2 min
Judge Orders DOJ to Give Comey Grand Jury Records
Nov 17, 2025
3 min
Michigan Man Charged After Shooting Teen Intruder
Nov 17, 2025
2 min
DHS Launches 'Operation Charlotte's Web'
Nov 17, 2025
2 min
House GOP Backs Epstein Files Release Bill
Nov 17, 2025
3 min
US Carrier Arrives in Caribbean Near Venezuela
Nov 17, 2025
3 min
Jets' Kris Boyd in Critical Condition After Shooting
Nov 16, 2025
2 min
NYC Woman Sexually Assaulted by Migrant Cabbie
Nov 16, 2025
6 min
70% of Palisades Fire Victims Still Displaced
Nov 16, 2025
2 min
14 Arrested in Mob-Run Sports Betting Ring
Nov 16, 2025
2 min
Mexico: Gen Z Protests Over Crime, Corruption
Nov 16, 2025
2 min
Loomer Teases Primary Run Against MTG
Nov 16, 2025
2 min
16 Antifa Members Charged in Texas ICE Riot
Nov 16, 2025
3 min
Trump to Sue BBC for $5B
Nov 16, 2025
3 min
Haiti: Gangs Exchange Fire With US Marines
Nov 16, 2025
1 min
US and Switzerland Reach Trade Deal
Nov 16, 2025
2 min

