Acting CISA chief defends workforce cuts, declares agency ‘back on mission’

Acting CISA chief defends workforce cuts, declares agency ‘back on mission’

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The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s acting leader used a hearing on Wednesday to defend the Trump administration’s mass layoffs at CISA and reassure lawmakers that the agency was still prepared to defend government and critical infrastructure networks from hackers.

“A disciplined mission requires the right workforce — not a larger one, but a more capable and skilled one,” Madhu Gottumukkala said during a House Homeland Security Committee hearing that featured him and two other Department of Homeland Security officials.

In the coming year, Gottumukkala added, “CISA will continue targeted hiring in mission critical roles while remaining aligned with [DHS’s] broader efforts to control costs and maximize return.”

For now, though, he said, “we have the staff that we need.”

CISA turmoil over layoffs, transfers

CISA has lost more than one-third of its workforce since President Donald Trump took office almost exactly one year ago. The Trump administration has forced out key experts, eliminated a major collaboration framework, withdrawn funding from a state and local cybersecurity group and shuttered offices that managed important partnerships with states, businesses and foreign allies.

At least 998 CISA employees have quit or been laid off or transferred since the start of the Trump administration, with 65 receiving forced reassignments to other agencies, according to an internal agency report that House Homeland Security Committee ranking member Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., entered into the record at the end of the hearing. Thompson’s office later provided the report to Cybersecurity Dive.

Lawmakers of both parties expressed concern about the turmoil at CISA, with committee chairman Andrew Gabarino, R-N.Y., saying that “workforce continuity, clear leadership, and mission readiness are essential to effective cyber defenses.”

Democrats were more critical. “At a time of persistent and growing cyber threats from malign foreign actors,” said Rep. James Walkinshaw, D-Va., the cuts at CISA “have weakened our defenses and left our critical systems and infrastructure more exposed and the American people more vulnerable.”

Gottumukkala repeatedly declined to answer questions about how CISA’s workforce purge was affecting its ability to execute its mission. When Walkinshaw asked if CISA had conducted an analysis of its staffing needs, Gottumukkala responded that CISA’s work “is mission-focused, which means capability is measured by outcomes, not head count.”

CISA’s attrition rate in 2025 was lower than the government-wide average, according to Gottumukkala, hovering at around 7.5% compared with the government-wide rate of 9.25%.

Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., the chairman of the homeland security panel’s cyber subcommittee, praised Gottumukkala over the workforce cuts. “You’re doing more with less,” he said, “and you’re doing it more efficiently.”

CISA is not planning to make any more organizational changes, Gottumukkala said, and the agency will consult with Congress if that changes.

The hearing, which was Gottumukkala’s first appearance before Congress, gave Democrats an opportunity to press him on multiple controversies that have recently embroiled his tenure at CISA, although he largely avoided commenting on them. He refused to confirm that he had failed a polygraph test, saying he didn’t “accept the premise of that characterization” and wouldn’t discuss security clearance–related matters in public. He declined to comment on a report that he had tried to oust CISA’s chief information officer, citing the complexities of personnel matters. And he dodged a question about DHS’s controversial plan to build a facility for discussing classified information at a South Dakota university aligned with DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, the state’s former governor.

Election security concerns

When Walkinshaw asked Gottumukkala about CISA eliminating funding for the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center, which forced many local governments to leave the group, Gottumukkala said none of the roughly two dozen other ISACs received federal funding, although CISA is still coordinating with all of them.

Gottumukkala also repeatedly said that no CISA personnel had been transferred to ICE to support Trump’s immigration crackdown, although Democratic lawmakers disputed that claim.



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