Noem Deputy Leaves ICE to Run for Congress

Republicans are lining up to oppose Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur in Ohio
Posted Jan 15, 2026 3:51 PM CST
Madison Sheahan, ICE Deputy, Resigns to Run for Congress
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Deputy Director Madison Sheahan speaks in October in Gary, Indiana, as Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem looks on.   (Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)

One of the architects of President Trump's hard-line push against immigrants is trading her ICE badge for a shot at Congress. Madison Sheahan, the No. 2 official at Immigration and Customs Enforcement, announced Thursday she's resigning to enter the Republican primary in Ohio's 9th District. The 28-year-old's goal is to unseat longtime Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur, the New York Times reports. In a launch video, Sheahan branded herself "a Trump conservative" and spotlighted her role in implementing the administration's deportation policies, declaring, "In less than one year at ICE, I've stopped more illegal immigration than Marcy Kaptur has in her 43 years in Washington."

Kaptur, 79, first elected in 1982, once held a solid Democratic seat in northwest Ohio, but a GOP-led redistricting before 2022 turned the district competitive. And a GOP-controlled panel last fall approved a new map designed to favor Republicans more. Kaptur narrowly survived in 2024, winning by less than a percentage point while Trump carried the district by 7 over Vice President Kamala Harris. Former state lawmaker Derek Merrin, who nearly defeated Kaptur last cycle, is running again, joined by several other Republicans including state Rep. Josh Williams—setting up a large primary field. Kaptur's campaign on Thursday welcomed a "messy primary" on the Republican side, per Axios.

"Voters are tired of the self-dealing corruption and culture of lawlessness they've seen over the last year," the statement said. "They want a leader focused on affordability and real results, and Marcy Kaptur consistently works across the aisle to deliver both." Sheahan worked for Noem when she was South Dakota governor and later ran Louisiana's Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. Her appointment to the No. 2 job at ICE upset some agency officials who argued that Sheahan lacked significant law enforcement experience. Noem called her a "terrific leader" in a statement to CBS News. In her resignation letter, per NBC News, Sheahan said, "When the call came to help President Trump clean up the dangerous immigration mess, as Deputy Director of ICE, I answered the call."

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