Trump urges new spy chief Pulte to gut US intelligence community
President Donald Trump has expressed his desire for the incoming acting Director of National Intelligence, Bill Pulte, to reduce the number of employees within the intelligence community. Trump stated he would not object if Pulte "cut" staff, suggesting the office's employee count has been "way too high for way too long." Pulte, a Trump loyalist currently heading the Federal Housing Finance Agency, was appointed to the acting intelligence chief role on Tuesday.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedPresident Donald Trump has expressed his desire for the incoming acting Director of National Intelligence, Bill Pulte, to reduce the number of employees within the intelligence community. Trump stated he would not object if Pulte "cut" staff, suggesting the office's employee count has been "way too high for way too long." Pulte, a Trump loyalist currently heading the Federal Housing Finance Agency, was appointed to the acting intelligence chief role on Tuesday. Trump previously told The Wall Street Journal that he believes many individuals in the intelligence agencies "shouldn't be there," citing holdovers from previous administrations. Democrats have criticized Pulte's appointment, citing his history of using government records against Trump's political adversaries.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedPulte has no previous intelligence experience.
Trump believes the number of employees in Pulte's office has been 'way too high for way too long'.
Trump wants incoming acting spy chief Bill Pulte to fire employees.
Bill Pulte was named acting Director of National Intelligence.
Democrats condemn Pulte's appointment, citing his history of weaponizing government records.