Noem: Shutdown to blame for delay in World Cup security funding - Newsday

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem attributed delays in securing $625 million in funding for the 2026 FIFA World Cup security preparations to a partial government shutdown caused by Democratic-led political disputes. The delay has hindered the distribution of funds to host cities, raising concerns about security readiness just over 100 days before the event. Critics, including Rep. Bennie Thompson, criticized Noem for blaming Congress, noting that DHS missed its own deadlines for awarding the funds. The shutdown stems from disagreements over immigration policies and federal funding — impacting essential security planning for the World Cup across U.S. host cities.

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Noem: Shutdown to blame for delay in World Cup security funding - Newsday

Long IslandPolitics# Noem: Shutdown to blame for delay in World Cup security funding

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has scaled back operations at...

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has scaled back operations at FEMA to "bare-minimum, life-saving operations only." Credit: AP/Caitlin O'Hara

WASHINGTON — Homeland Security Department Secretary Kristi Noem said Thursday that the reason security preparations at the 11 U.S. cities hosting 2026 FIFA World Cup matches are in jeopardy is that a partial government shutdown has frozen $625 million already approved by Congress.

Noem confirmed in a statement that distribution to host cities of the Federal Emergency Management Agency money to help beef-up security buildups for events beginning in roughly 100 days has been stalled.

"No funds have been awarded yet under the FIFA World Cup Grant Program," Noem said, blaming the delay on Democrats who she said are causing her department’s partial shutdown.

FEMA "was in the final stages of reviewing applications to ensure proper oversight," Noem said, "when Democrats shut down the government putting significant portions of the FEMA staff on administrative leave."

The top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, scoffed at Noem’s blame-throwing statement.

"Congress appropriated funding for World Cup security last July, yet DHS didn't let host cities apply for the funding until November. Kristi Noem then missed her own department’s Jan. 30 deadline for awarding the World Cup funding, and now she wants to blame Congress for her own department’s dysfunction," Thompson said.

" She has no one to blame but herself," he said.

Long Island Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-Bayport), the chair or the House Homeland Security Committee, did not provide an immediate response through a spokeswoman to Noem.

Noem’s statement, sent to Newsday and posted on X, comes after Garbarino and colleagues on the Homeland panel heard testimony Tuesday from World Cup host city representatives that time was running short — one saying the money wis needed within 30 days or cancellations of some side events would have to be canceled.

The World Cup matches will last nearly six weeks, from June 11 through the July 19 final, which will be held at MetLife Stadium.

Although Mexico and Canada will also be hosting matches, about three-fourths of the record 104 games will be played in U.S. host cities. Eight of those will occur at MetLife Stadium.

The $625 million at issue is money Congress appropriated as part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act of domestic spending. It was intended to support security buildups, training and readiness exercises, cybersecurity defenses and increased information sharing and analysis between law enforcement agencies.

But Ray Martinez, the chief operating office the 2026 FIFA World Cup Miami Host Committee, told Garbarino’s Homeland Security Committee on Tuesday that the roughly $70 million to his city must arrive within 30 days, so preparations can move forward.

Garbarino pressed Martinez: "So if you don’t get the FEMA grants in the next 30 days, the city of Miami is going to have to start canceling because you can’t prepare for the security of sites?"

Martinez said that was correct, because "without receiving this money, it could be catastrophic for our planning and coordination."

At issue, he explained, is that states and communities must start building and coordinating security plans beyond the stadiums — for team base-camps, the huge multiday FIFA fan fests, and other outside events tied to the games that are also expected to draw hundreds of thousands.

Joseph Mabin, deputy chief of the Kansas City, Mo., police, told lawmakers the funding is critical for that city’s security staffing and mutual aid preparations, for what will be an 18-day fan festival and six matches at Arrowhead Stadium over three weeks.

"We just don’t have enough officers within my own department to cover all the threats," he said.

Rep. Nellie Pou (D-N.J.), the top Democrat on a special House task force overseeing the World Cup and whose district includes MetLife Stadium, said that the money was need to keep the games safe. "This isn’t competency," Pou said. "This is chaos."

The Homeland Security Department is in a partial shutdown because Congress has been locked in a fight over a bill to keep its operations fully funded. The battle is centered on demands by Democrats for restrictions on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement tactics and operations in the wake of Trump’s stepped-up deportation push in Minneapolis and other cities, and fatalities involving federal agents.

Noem on Sunday scaled back FEMA operations to "bare-minimum, life-saving operations only."

In her statement Thursday, Noem said, "This Democrat shutdown directly impacts DHS’s ability to keep Americans safe at these events and our national security. Democrats must end this shutdown now and let DHS get back to our mission of protecting the homeland."

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