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ATF nominee advanced by Senate Judiciary Committee

Ryan Tarinelli, CQ-Roll Call on

Published in News & Features

WASHINGTON — Trump administration nominee Robert Cekada is one step closer to leading the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, as the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 14-8 to advance his nomination Thursday.

A full Senate confirmation could signal a more consistent future for an agency that often finds itself with a rotating cast of agency leads instead of a permanent director. The acting director role is currently held by Daniel Driscoll, who is also serving as secretary of the Army. The position was previously temporarily occupied by FBI Director Kash Patel.

Cekada, meanwhile, has been viewed as a more traditional pick to helm the ATF, as an agency veteran with a decades-long career in law enforcement that began as a police cadet with the New York City Police Department in the early 1990s.

He started at the ATF in 2005 and rose up through the ranks over the years, eventually being elevated last year to deputy director, a role in which he now serves as the agency’s second-highest-ranking official.

The nomination of Cekada signals a shift in fate for the agency. Last year, the Justice Department pushed to eliminate the agency and merge its functions into the Drug Enforcement Administration while also calling for a deep cut to the ATF’s budget.

Now, the Trump administration has recommended a longtime agency official who recently criticized the latest Republican-led spending cut to lead the agency. That $40 million decrease, a 2.5% cut, in a fiscal 2026 law (PL 119-74) would continue a “compounded reduction in operational funding,” Cekada said in a written response to lawmakers.

“These consecutive cuts compound across years, eroding core enforcement operations and markedly constraining ATF’s ability to support state and local law-enforcement partners,” Cekada wrote.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, said the nominee was “well-suited” to head the ATF, referencing his police service and his long tenure at the agency.

“Throughout his three-decade career, he protected Americans at the state and federal levels,” Grassley said.

 

Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the top Democrat on the committee, praised Cekada as a “career professional” who is committed to fighting crime but said he would be opposing his nomination.

“His hearing testimony does not assure me that he would stand up in this administration to ensure that this very controversial agency is not weaponized against the American people,” Durbin said.

The agency, which is charged with upholding the nation’s gun laws and firearm regulations, is often ensnared in high-profile debates over Second Amendment protections and the role of the federal government in addressing American gun violence. Still, last year, groups on both sides of the gun debate panned the idea to shutter the agency, albeit for different reasons, and lawmakers rejected the proposal in the fiscal 2026 appropriations process.

During his bid for the director job, Cekada stressed the agency’s law enforcement mission while pledging to target violent crime and focus on repeat violent offenders, serial shooters and gang members.

Despite his commitment to the agency and complaints about funding, Cekada has appeared committed to making changes in line with long-standing conservative complaints that ATF actions have infringed on Second Amendment rights.

Cekada, in written responses to lawmakers, said he would make sure the agency “minimizes” any burdens the agency puts on citizens who are “lawfully exercising their Second Amendment rights.”

He also committed to working with Attorney General Pamela Bondi to review agency regulations and ensure they are compatible with the Second Amendment, “in accordance” with a Trump executive order aimed at protecting Second Amendment rights.

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