Sean Cairncross Confirmed in 59-35 Senate Vote Despite Lacking Technical Experience

The United States has a new national cyber director after a tense Senate vote ended months of political and procedural delays, allowing the Trump administration to push forward an overhaul of federal cybersecurity priorities.
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Sean Cairncross, a former Republican National Committee executive with no cybersecurity experience, was confirmed Saturday in a 59-35 Senate vote as the president’s top adviser on federal cybersecurity. He replaces former National Cyber Director Harry Coker, a veteran cybersecurity official who resigned Jan. 20.
“As the cyber strategic environment continues to evolve, we must ensure our policy efforts and capabilities deliver results for our national security and the American people,” Cairncross said in a statement following his confirmation. “The United States must dominate the cyber domain through strong collaboration across departments and agencies, as well as private industry.”
Congressional leaders and the White House still are at an impasse over the nomination Sean Plankey, the president’s pick to lead the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, remains on hold by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who is demanding the release of a 2022 report on telecom vulnerabilities tied to the Salt Typhoon hack (see: Trump’s CISA Nominee Grilled Over 2020 Election Fraud Claims).
Trump tapped Cairncross to lead the Office of the National Cyber Director in February. Cairncross served as chief operating officer of the Republican National Committee from 2015 to 2016 and as CEO of the Millennium Challenge Corporation, a U.S. foreign aid agency that funds infrastructure in developing countries. During June testimony to the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, Cairncross said his goal “is to lead cyber policy coordination across the federal government” through stronger interagency collaboration (see: Trump Taps Former RNC Executive for National Cyber Director).
“It’s true I don’t have a technical background in cyber, but in my roles running private organizations and national party committees, I’ve been on the user side of this,” Cairncross told lawmakers.
Jason Oxman, president and CEO of the tech trade association ITI urged the new director “to focus on a strategic, coordinated approach to U.S. cyber policy.” He added that the industry supports reauthorizing the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 before its September expiration, calling it “an essential law that will help ONCD achieve its cybersecurity mission” (see: Key Cyber Law’s Lapse Could Mute Threat Sharing Nationwide).
