- President Trump named Bill Pulte, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency and chairman of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as acting Director of National Intelligence
- Pulte succeeds Tulsi Gabbard, who resigned as DNI last month; he will serve until Trump nominates a permanent replacement
- Pulte will hold all three roles simultaneously — acting DNI, FHFA director, and Fannie/Freddie chairman — a rare concentration of sensitive government authority
- Trump cited Pulte’s “deep experience managing the most sensitive matters in America,” pointing to his performance overseeing the government-sponsored mortgage enterprises
What Happened?
President Trump announced Tuesday that Bill Pulte — his close ally who has been running the Federal Housing Finance Agency and chairing the boards of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — will take on an additional role as acting Director of National Intelligence. Pulte fills the vacancy left by Tulsi Gabbard, who stepped down from the DNI post last month. Trump made the announcement via social media, praising Pulte’s handling of sensitive government matters at the mortgage giants. Crucially, Pulte will retain his existing roles at FHFA, Fannie, and Freddie while simultaneously overseeing the US intelligence community.
Why It Matters?
The appointment is striking on multiple dimensions. Pulte has no intelligence community background — his profile is that of a Trump loyalist installed at FHFA to advance the administration’s housing finance reform agenda, including a long-discussed potential privatization of Fannie and Freddie. Placing him atop the intelligence apparatus signals that Trump is prioritizing political loyalty over institutional expertise in one of the most sensitive roles in government. The dual-hatting of a single official across mortgage regulation and national intelligence is structurally unusual and raises questions about conflicts of interest and bandwidth. The move also continues the pattern of Gabbard’s departure leaving the DNI post filled by acting rather than Senate-confirmed leadership, which limits institutional accountability.
What’s Next?
Watch for Trump’s timeline on nominating a permanent DNI. “Acting” designations at senior national security posts have historically extended far longer than initially signaled. Pulte’s simultaneous stewardship of Fannie and Freddie is the subplot: the housing-finance reform agenda — including potential privatization of the GSEs, which would be one of the largest financial transactions in US history — remains on the table, and whether Pulte can credibly drive that process while managing the intelligence community will surface quickly. Senate Democrats are likely to raise objections; watch for oversight hearing requests and scrutiny of whether the dual appointment complies with applicable statutes governing acting officer appointments.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













