Critical Infrastructure Security
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Cyberwarfare / Nation-State Attacks
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
Senator Declines to Lift Hold on Trump’s CISA Nominee Without Clear Timeline

The U.S. cyber defense agency will release a long-withheld report on telecom infrastructure flaws, a move analysts say could expose the agency’s past security failures – and clear the path for President Donald Trump’s nominee to take over after six months of leadership churn and workforce cuts.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency sparked bipartisan criticism by withholding a 2022 report detailing telecom vulnerabilities tied to the Salt Typhoon hack – failures that may have allowed Chinese hackers to the communications of top political figures including Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance. In response, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., placed a hold on Trump’s nominee to lead the agency, Sean Plankey, a former Department of Energy and National Security Council official, in order to pressure CISA into releasing the report (see: Trump’s Pick to Lead CISA is Stuck in Confirmation Limbo).
CISA Director of Public Affairs Marci McCarthy said Wednesday the agency plans to release the report “with proper clearance” and stressed the agency has worked with telecom providers “before, during and after Salt Typhoon.” The Senate Homeland Security Committee is set to vote Wednesday to advance Plankey’s nomination. Plankey has private sector backing and support from Senate Republicans.
McCarthy did not provide a timeline for the report’s clearance process and declined to answer questions about when it would be released. A spokesperson for Wyden’s office said Wednesday the senator plans to continue blocking a full Senate vote until the report is made public.
“Sen. Wyden does not intend to release his hold,” the spokesperson said. Wyden previously pledged to continue blocking Plankey’s nomination until the report is public. “The Trump administration might not have been paying attention, so I’ll say it again: I will not lift my hold on Mr. Plankey’s nomination until this report is public,” he said (see: Trump’s CISA Nominee Grilled Over 2020 Election Fraud Claims).
“It’s ridiculous that CISA seems more concerned with covering up phone companies’ negligent cybersecurity than it is with protecting Americans from Chinese hackers,” he added. “Trump’s administration won’t act to shore up our dangerously insecure telecom system, it hasn’t gotten to the bottom of the Salt Typhoon hack and it won’t even let Americans see an unclassified report on why it’s so important to put mandatory security rules in place for phone companies.”
Republicans can still move forward with the nomination despite the procedural hold, though a hold by any senator causes delays. Plankey previously missed a June confirmation hearing due to delays in finalizing his FBI security clearance, triggering a series of procedural setbacks and scheduling issues between the White House and the Senate Homeland Security Committee.
A full Senate vote on Plankey’s nomination has not yet been scheduled. It remains unclear whether CISA will provide a timeline for the report’s clearance process or expedite its release to facilitate Plankey’s confirmation as agency head.
CISA has faced sharp losses in personnel and funding due to White House administration cost-cutting measures, including a nearly one-third staff reduction since Trump took office and proposed deep budget cuts for fiscal year 2026 (see: ‘There Will Be Pain’: CISA Cuts Spark Bipartisan Concerns).