The knife came down fast. One day, Cameron Hamilton was warning Congress that killing FEMA would put Americans at risk. The next, he was out — fired behind closed doors by Trump’s inner circle. As hurricanes still scar coastal towns and billions vanish into migrant hotel scandals, Trump vows to “take over” disaster relief and maybe scrap FEMA altogeth…
Hamilton’s ouster crystallizes a dangerous moment: America is still rebuilding from storms like Hurricane Helene, yet the very agency meant to coordinate national disaster response is under open attack. Trump’s allies paint FEMA as bloated, corrupt and captured by Biden-era priorities, pointing to tens of millions allegedly diverted to luxury hotels for illegal immigrants instead of storm victims. To them, Hamilton was defending a failed status quo.
But stripping FEMA’s power or eliminating it altogether would leave fractured state agencies scrambling alone in the face of megafires, historic floods and billion‑dollar hurricanes that routinely cross state lines. Hamilton’s warning to Congress wasn’t just bureaucratic self‑preservation; it was a plea about scale. Local officials may know their communities, but they can’t print money, mobilize the military or coordinate multi‑state recovery. In firing him, the administration didn’t settle the FEMA debate — it raised the stakes for the next disaster.