Delia Ramirez Accuses DHS Secretary Christy Gnome of Lying to Congress, Igniting Explosive Accountability Showdown

Congresswoman Delia Ramirez delivered one of the most confrontational moments Capitol Hill has seen this year when she looked DHS Secretary Christy Gnome in the eye and said what many officials avoid saying outright: you lied to the American people.
This was not a rhetorical attack. Ramirez backed her charge with court orders, arrest data, and investigative reporting that directly contradicted the administration’s claims about immigration enforcement. Her opening salvo set the tone for a hearing that quickly escalated into a constitutional reckoning.

Ramirez cited documented evidence showing that more than 170 U.S. citizens were detained by immigration agents, shattering repeated assertions that enforcement targets only “the worst of the worst.” She also entered into the record data showing nearly 75,000 people with no criminal record arrested by ICE.
The most serious allegation centered on defiance of the courts. Ramirez pressed Gnome on deportation flights to El Salvador that continued despite federal court orders requiring them to stop. Gnome acknowledged the decisions were hers, asserting executive authority even over judicial rulings.
That admission drew a sharp constitutional line. Courts are not advisory bodies. When executive officials choose which rulings to obey, separation of powers collapses. Ramirez framed the issue plainly: this was not a policy disagreement, but a direct challenge to the rule of law.

She then detailed the human cost. Communities subjected to chemical agents despite court prohibitions. Residents surveilled, detained without warrants, and subjected to force. U.S. citizens swept into enforcement operations with no due process protections.
Ramirez also accused DHS of stonewalling congressional oversight, documenting repeated denied meeting requests and ignored communications. Oversight, she argued, is not optional—it is a constitutional obligation of the executive branch.
The exchange ended with a stark warning. Ramirez laid out three outcomes: resignation, termination, or impeachment. That was not theatrics. It was procedural reality. When officials lie to Congress, misuse funds, and ignore court orders, accountability is the mechanism democracy relies on. This hearing was not noise—it was a warning signal.