President Donald Trump believes that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard should remain in the job he chose for her, sources tell the Daily Mail.
Since the war in Iran started last month, Gabbard’s rivals have questioned her loyalty to the mission, advocating that the president fire her and name a replacement.
One solution, proposed by an ally of Attorney General Pam Bondi, who was fired by the president on Thursday was to shift Bondi to replace Gabbard, according to CBS.
But the president indicated that he wanted Gabbard to stay in the job the report noted.
The White House pushed back against a report from the Guardian that said Trump had soured on Gabbard after her former deputy Joe Kent, who made a dramatic exit and resigned in protest over the president’s decision to go to war with Iran.
The report comes on the same day Trump ousted Bondi from her role as Attorney General and less than a month after he removed Kristi Noem from the Department of Homeland Security.
But the White House pushed back strongly against the idea that the president was ready to oust a third woman from his cabinet.
‘President Trump has total confidence in Director Gabbard, and any insinuation otherwise is totally fake news,’ White House spokesman Steven Cheung said in a statement to the Daily Mail.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard stands after President Donald Trump spoke about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Trump has quizzed some members of his Cabinet about replacing Gabbard, sources told the Guardian
Others in the administration suggested that the reports about Gabbard’s demsire were a result of bitter infighting within the Washington intelligence community.
‘The DC establishment, including the CIA, is always after her because of her efforts to reveal their lies to the American people,’ one administration official told the Daily Mail.
‘She’s doing exactly what POTUS tasked her to do. You’ll notice there are never hit pieces on the CIA.’
‘The President has assembled the most talented and impactful Cabinet ever, and they have collectively delivered historic victories on behalf of the American people.’
Gabbard was spotted at the White House as recently as Wednesday evening, where she attended the President’s late-night national address regarding Iran.
When pressed on his confidence in the DNI earlier this week, the President responded, ‘Yeah, sure.’
‘She’s a little different in her thought process than me, but that doesn’t make somebody not available to serve,’ he added.
Gabbard, a former Democratic Congresswoman who has long rallied against US foreign interventionism, reportedly peeved Trump last year after releasing an ominous video about the dangers of nuclear war.
Administration officials pushed back on the reported claim, noting how Gabbard has received a lot of praise from the President recently and has been a near-constant presence at the White House amid the Iran war
Vice President JD Vance is joined by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and others as they observe the beginning stages of Operation Epic Fury
Despite Trump and Gabbard’s ideological gap, White House officials have praised her work during the Iran war, saying she has ‘consistent and overwhelming support’ from the President.
Officials have told the Daily Mail that the DNI has been a near-constant presence at the White House since the conflict began.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back against reporting that Gabbard was on the outs, calling her a ‘respected member of the President’s national security team’ who was doing a ‘fantastic job.’
Vice President JD Vance is also a supporter of Gabbard’s efforts on the president’s behalf.
Sources familiar with Tulsi Gabbard’s position in the administration say that any attempt to smear the director with Kent’s defection was off base, as she pointedly distanced herself from his protest resignation.
Despite efforts to draft her into a larger protest of the Iran war, Gabbard sided with the president, pointedly testifying that it was up to Trump to decide what was an imminent threat.