‘Loyalty
Enforcer’ Laura Loomer Targets Additional Officials
The
far-right activist is continuing to use her close association with President
Trump to go after those she deems insufficiently loyal.
After
being denied jobs in both President Trump’s campaign and in his administration,
Laura Loomer has set out to prove that she is a better judge of personnel than
the president’s people are.
Robert
DraperJulian E. BarnesChristina Jewett
By Robert
DraperJulian E. Barnes and Christina Jewett
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/30/us/politics/laura-loomer-trump.html
July 30,
2025
Laura
Loomer, the far-right activist and self-described Trump administration “loyalty
enforcer,” has had another busy stretch.
Last
Friday, April Falcon Doss, the general counsel of the National Security Agency,
was fired after Ms. Loomer spotlighted conservative attacks of her previous
work, including for the Senate Intelligence Committee’s Democratic staff.
Then the
Food and Drug Administration’s top vaccine official, Dr. Vinay Prasad, resigned
on Tuesday after a post by Ms. Loomer on social media, in which she pointed out
his past statements disparaging President Trump and describing his following as
a “cult.”
On
Wednesday, the Army secretary, Daniel Driscoll, ordered the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point to rescind the employment offer it made to a
cybersecurity expert and Army veteran, Jen Easterly. Ms. Easterly, who has
worked for both Republican and Democratic administrations, had drawn Ms.
Loomer’s ire for serving as the director of the Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency under President Joseph R. Biden Jr.
They are
the most recent examples of government officials being “Loomered,” in Ms.
Loomer’s own parlance. A podcaster and influencer who expresses fierce fidelity
to Mr. Trump, Ms. Loomer has flexed the power of her broad social media
following and her access to the White House to target those whom she views as
insufficiently loyal.
While it
is difficult to know the extent of her reach, multiple officials across the
administration have been pushed out after ending up in Ms. Loomer’s sights.
This year, she called for a purge of the National Security Council, targeted
top officials at the National Security Agency and even went after a career
federal prosecutor in Los Angeles.
Kevin
Carroll, a former C.I.A. officer who is now a lawyer representing intelligence
officials fired by the Trump administration, said Ms. Loomer’s unfettered
influence was dangerous.
“You have
a person, from outside of the government of no national security experience and
with extreme views, having de facto hire and fire authority over some of the
most senior and important positions in the United States government,” Mr.
Carroll said.
“Eventually,
when all of the qualified people are driven out and only the people acceptable
to Laura Loomer remain, there could be an extremely bad result for the United
States in some international crisis,” he added.
Asked to
comment on concerns that Mr. Carroll and others have about Ms. Loomer’s effect
on personnel decisions, a White House spokesman, Kush Desai, did not directly
respond, instead saying that Mr. Trump had “assembled the best and brightest
talent to put Americans and America first.”
A senior
administration official said the recent departures were not necessarily tied to
Ms. Loomer’s public criticisms, but declined to elaborate. Mr. Trump has
publicly praised Ms. Loomer as “a fantastic woman, a true patriot” and
“amazing.”
For her
part, Ms. Loomer — who was denied jobs in both Mr. Trump’s campaign and in his
administration — has said that she is determined to prove that she is a better
judge of personnel than the president’s own staff.
“I was
raised to dress for the job you want, and even if you don’t have the job,
pretend that you do,” Ms. Loomer said in an interview this summer. “I want to
do vetting, so I’m going to do the job I want.”
Ms.
Loomer now appears to have other officials on her radar. Late last week, she
was seen walking through the West Wing, cradling a large stack of documents
that she had brought into the White House.
She has
recently directed her criticism at a senior Pentagon official, Tom Rakusan,
citing an excerpt from a new book that recounts his work at the C.I.A.
countering Russia around the time of the 2016 election.
Mr.
Rakusan, a C.I.A. veteran, is an expert on Russia and looked critically at
Moscow’s efforts to manipulate American politics. Ms. Loomer’s focus on him
caused consternation among current and former officials, who said that he is a
fan of Mr. Trump and supportive of his agenda.
The
C.I.A. declined to comment. The Pentagon did not respond to a request for
comment.
Ms.
Loomer has claimed credit for the removal of at least three senior officials
from the National Security Agency: General Timothy Haugh, the former director;
Wendy Noble, his deputy; and now Ms. Doss, the agency’s top lawyer.
U.S.
officials said Ms. Doss’s removal, and the voluntary retirement of two other
top lawyers at the N.S.A., had created a noticeable gap in expertise at the
agency, whose lawyers must routinely review and approve spying operations.
This
week, in his first interview since being fired, General Haugh was reluctant to
address the circumstances of his dismissal, saying only that he had served at
the pleasure of Mr. Trump.
“I don’t
and did not expect an explanation, and from the second I was told I was no
longer serving in the role, the focus shifts to the leaders the president has
put in the capacity,” General Haugh said.
The
impact of losing such expertise appears to trouble Ms. Loomer less than the
prospect of having officials in government she thinks cannot be trusted. In
ferreting out those she believes to be disloyal, Ms. Loomer relies on hundreds
of tips that she says she receives weekly through her website, as well as
encrypted emails.
Ms.
Loomer said in an interview on Wednesday that she recently received a tip on
her website about past remarks by Dr. Prasad, who was the top vaccine and gene
therapy official at the F.D.A. and had the backing of the health secretary,
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
She said
she spoke by phone to the tipster, whom she described as an administration
official in one of the health-related government agencies, and then began
listening to Dr. Prasad’s podcasts, where he had said of Mr. Trump in 2020, “I
hate him too,” and a year later joked about using a stuffed toy of the
president as a voodoo doll. Dr. Prasad, whose resignation was confirmed on
Tuesday by the Health and Human Services Department, declined to comment.
Inside
the F.D.A., there were mixed reactions on Wednesday to his abrupt departure and
worries about who else could be targeted by Ms. Loomer, according to current
and recently departed F.D.A. staff members.
Ms.
Loomer insists that she is not an “absolutist” when it comes to “auditing” the
record of current or prospective government officials.
This
year, she openly supported Jared Isaacman, a billionaire tech entrepreneur, to
be Mr. Trump’s NASA administrator, despite Mr. Isaacman having made
contributions to Democrats.
Mr. Trump
ultimately withdrew Mr. Isaacman’s nomination, telling others at the time that
he did so because of the entrepreneur’s ties to Democrats. Without directly
criticizing Mr. Trump’s decision, Ms. Loomer posted on X that “he would have
been a fantastic NASA Administrator.”
“Isaacman
never made derogatory comments about President Trump and has an exceptional
talent that’s hard to replicate,” Ms. Loomer said on Wednesday. “But when
someone like Vinay Prasad insults the president’s character and calls into
question the sanity of his supporters, then that’s somebody who’s not going to
be a fit for the Trump administration.”
Helene
Cooper contributed reporting.
Robert
Draper is based in Washington and writes about domestic politics. He is the
author of several books and has been a journalist for three decades.
Julian E.
Barnes covers the U.S. intelligence agencies and international security matters
for The Times. He has written about security issues for more than two decades.
Christina
Jewett covers the Food and Drug Administration, which means keeping a close eye
on drugs, medical devices, food safety and tobacco policy.


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