Whoever replaces the Homeland Security secretary does not only inherit a title. They inherit a pile of pending awards that did not clear before the door closed, and every week those files sit still is a week modernization and disaster aid slip sideways.
Pending awards stall modernization as a successor inherits blame
According to reporting that Axios and others have followed, Secretary Kristi Noem is on track to leave dozens of pending contracts on her desk when she leaves office. That is not a personality story. It is an operations story. When a cabinet officer routes large-dollar decisions through a narrow review lane, the queue does not vanish because the org chart changes. The next secretary either clears the backlog, reopens decisions, or wears the delay.
Senate Democrats have previously documented how a policy of personally reviewing expenditures above a set threshold left more than a thousand FEMA contracts, grants, or disaster assistance awards delayed or pending as of late 2025. DHS disputed the characterization and said the process was meant to speed funding. The dispute itself shows the bind: career staff need signatures to move money; political leadership controls the pen; transitions freeze both.
Procurement staff lose months to transitions while headlines focus on personalities
Government Executive and ProPublica have reported on parallel threads: questions about who approved which multimillion-dollar contracts and what role political aides played. Those investigations matter for accountability. For the mission, the more immediate issue is throughput. FEMA and other components run on cadence. A three-week average wait on aid decisions, as alleged in oversight materials, is not abstract for a town hit by flood or fire.
Axios has tracked how contracting and spending reviews at DHS became a recurring flashpoint in hearings. When lawmakers ask about ads, no-bid awards, and who signed what, they are also signaling that the department is under a microscope. That microscope slows movement. Vendors pause. Program offices hedge. The backlog grows.
What This Actually Means
The next secretary will be judged on border outcomes and disaster response, but the lever is often procurement. If dozens of awards still sit pending, the successor either risks looking weak by mass-approving or looks obstructionist by re-reviewing. Rotation politics beat operational continuity again unless the transition plan explicitly assigns acting authority and deadlines to clear the queue.
Background
What is FEMA? The Federal Emergency Management Agency sits inside DHS and handles disaster assistance, grants, and recovery programs. When its awards stall, local governments and nonprofits wait.