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Norms Impact

Noem claims to be a skilled trucker, calls foreign drivers ‘extremely dangerous’

A Cabinet secretary used the machinery of public safety to brand “foreign” truck drivers as a threat, normalizing government-by-suspicion as policy replaces evidence with identity.

Executive

Oct 30, 2025

Sources

Summary

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in Gary, Indiana, that putting “foreigners” behind the wheel of semi-trucks and 18-wheelers is “extremely dangerous” and endangers citizens on U.S. roads. Her remarks align with a broader executive-branch push to restrict non-citizens’ access to commercial driving work through visa pauses, license limits, and federal funding threats. The practical consequence is a federal posture that treats immigration status and nationality as proxies for public-safety risk in transportation policy, with immediate impacts on licensing, employment, and state–federal relations.

Reality Check

When senior officials cast entire classes of people as inherently “dangerous,” they lay the groundwork for policy that strips rights through stigma and coercion rather than proof—an abuse pattern that can widen from immigrants to any disfavored group. Based on the conduct described here, the more immediate exposure is not a clean criminal case but a profound breach of core governance norms: anti–collective punishment, evidence-based regulation, and non-discriminatory administration of licensing and employment rules. The most legally perilous conduct referenced is the instruction to falsify federal records by listing living immigrants as dead; if accurate, that implicates federal false-statement and records statutes, including 18 U.S.C. § 1001 and 18 U.S.C. § 2071. Even without prosecutions, using federal power to deny work and mobility by identity sets a precedent that weakens due process and invites weaponization of the state against ordinary residents.

Detail

<p>At a press conference in Gary, Indiana, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem stated that she is an experienced driver of semi-trucks and 18-wheelers and claimed that placing “foreigners” behind the wheel “becomes extremely dangerous.” She asserted that operating large trucks requires both skill and the ability to “communicate” with others on the road and argued that non-citizens cannot be trusted to drive them safely, describing tractor-trailers as weighing “tens of thousands of pounds” and carrying “explosive fuel.”</p><p>Her comments followed a series of administration actions and statements focused on immigrants and public safety. In August, Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed an order pausing the issuance of work visas for commercial truck drivers, and in September issued an emergency regulation reducing the number of driver’s licenses given to non-citizens by requiring a mandatory federal immigration status check for truck licensing. On Sunday, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said he planned to revoke $160 million in federal funds for California over alleged commercial licensing of undocumented drivers; a California DMV spokesperson said there was no legitimate basis to withhold funds and stated the state is in compliance with the September 29 emergency regulations.</p>