🚨 The Latest: California Senator Removed After Interrupting Kristi Noem’s News Conference
What happened
- On June 12, 2025, Senator Alex Padilla (D‑Calif.) was attending a scheduled U.S. Northern Command briefing at the Wilshire Federal Building in Los Angeles when he decided to observe a Department of Homeland Security press conference led by Secretary Kristi Noem, concerning immigration raids and National Guard deployments in the city
- After sitting quietly behind reporters, Padilla stood up a few minutes into the briefing and announced loudly: “I am Senator Alex Padilla. I have questions for the Secretary,” challenging Noem’s rhetoric about “liberating” L.A.
- Security personnel—identified as Secret Service, FBI police, and a National Guard escort—then forcefully removed him: he was pushed to the floor, restrained, and handcuffed. He was later released without charges
The spectrum of reactions
Padilla and Democratic allies
- Padilla condemned the removal as alarming, stating that if this is how they treat a senator, “I can only imagine what they are doing to farmworkers…”
- Fellow Democrats, including Senators Adam Schiff, Elizabeth Warren, and Vice President Kamala Harris, demanded formal investigations and criticized the incident as a serious abuse of power
- California Governor Gavin Newsom denounced it as “outrageous, dictatorial and shameful,” while calling for military involvement reversal
Noem and Republican responses
- Secretary Noem defended the security’s actions, saying Padilla didn’t identify himself or wear proper credentials, labeling his approach “inappropriate”
- The DHS argued that their agents simply misidentified Padilla as a disruptive threat, contrasting Padilla’s version
- CNN analyst Josh Campbell (ex-FBI) partially backed the response but warned the physical takedown required scrutiny
- Republicans in Congress sided with Noem and DHS, calling Padilla’s interruption “childish” and irresponsible
Why it matters
- The incident has deeply polarized lawmakers amid ongoing debates over the Trump administration’s immigration crackdowns, federal deployment of guard and military units in L.A., and enforcement tactics
- It raises pressing questions about democratic norms and whether even a U.S. senator can be barred from interrupting a cabinet-level official’s prepared remarks without consequence
- Democrats argue it reflects authoritarian overreach; Republicans view it as proper security protocol during a sensitive press event.
What’s next
- Investigations are underway, with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus calling for reviews and House Democrats likely to launch oversight proceedings .
- Tensions continue between federal and California officials over the legality of deploying military forces in response to protests .
- Both Padilla and Noem have since engaged in a brief 15-minute conversation, but the substantive disagreement remains unresolved
Bottom Line
The incident reflects a sharp escalation in tensions between federal authority and congressional oversight, with serious implications for civil liberties, separation of powers, and public protest rights. Whether this becomes a watershed moment—or a footnote—depends on ongoing investigations and political fallout.