
Kash Patel, Trump’s pick for FBI director, arrives to testify during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Jan. 30, 2025 in Washington, D.C.
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Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
The Republican-led Senate voted Thursday to confirm Kash Patel as the new FBI director despite questions about whether he has the qualifications and the temperament to lead the nation’s most powerful law enforcement agency.
Patel, who had been a fierce critic of the bureau, was confirmed by a 51-49 vote, with Republican Sens. Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski joining all Democrats in opposing him.
It caps a remarkable rise for Patel, who has worked as a public defender, federal prosecutor and congressional aide before serving as a national security official in President Trump’s first term. He later emerged as a fixture in MAGA world, a right-wing podcast regular and a Trump loyalist.
Republicans welcomed his confirmation. They argue that the FBI has unfairly targeted conservatives in recent years, and they see Patel as someone who will fix that purported problem.
They pushed Patel’s nomination over the line in the face of fierce opposition from Democrats, who voiced concerns about Patel’s fitness for the job and his ability—or even desire—to maintain the FBI’s traditional independence the White House.
On Thursday morning, Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee gathered in front of FBI headquarters to speak out against Patel.
“Mr. Patel will be a political and national security disaster, if confirmed,” said Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the panel’s top Democrat.
“I’m convinced he has neither the experience, the judgment nor the temperament to lead the FBI,” Durbin added. “My Senate Republican colleagues are willfully ignoring myriad red flags about Mr. Patel, especially his recurring instinct to threaten retribution against his perceived enemies. This is an extremely dangerous flaw for someone who seeks to lead the nation’s most powerful domestic investigative agency for the next 10 years.”
Neither of Patel’s immediate predecessors served out the job’s full 10-year term. Trump fired then-director James Comey in 2017, and handpicked Christopher Wray to replace him.
After Trump’s election win last November, he tapped Patel to lead the FBI, effectively pushing Wray out of the job.
Unlike those two men, Patel has no experience as a senior law enforcement official. That has fueled questions about his qualifications to lead the FBI.
But the pushback to his nomination has centered more around his loyalty to Trump and his past statements about rooting out what he calls the “deep state” and going after his and Trump’s perceived political enemies, including at the FBI.
In one podcast appearance, Patel vowed to shut down FBI headquarters on Day 1 and reopen it as a “museum of the deep state.”
At his confirmation hearing, Patel sought to deflect questions about his past comments, telling lawmakers “any accusations leveled against me that I would somehow put political bias before the Constitution are grotesquely unfair.”