‘Stop Talking About Biden!’ Democrat Blows Up on Trump’s Housing Secretary at Senate Hearing – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
During a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing on the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s 2027 budget request, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand pressed Secretary Scott Turner to deliver concrete results on homelessness rather than revisit policies from the prior administration. The exchange underscored the practical challenge lawmakers face when key data remains unavailable more than a year past its deadline. Without the latest point-in-time count, the committee cannot fully evaluate whether current funding levels and strategies are reducing the number of people living on the streets.
Overdue Report Leaves Oversight in Limbo
The missing homeless data report has created a clear gap in accountability. Turner noted that the previous administration recorded roughly 770,000 people experiencing homelessness at a single point in time despite record federal spending. Gillibrand countered that the department has now operated under the current leadership for well over a year, yet no updated figure has been released to show whether that number has fallen, stayed flat, or risen further.
Committee members rely on the annual report to track trends and adjust appropriations accordingly. Its absence means decisions about the 2027 budget rest on incomplete information, leaving both supporters and critics of the department’s approach without a shared factual baseline.
Exchange Highlights Core Disagreement
After Turner referenced the prior administration’s record during his opening remarks, Gillibrand interrupted to steer the discussion toward present performance. She asked directly whether the homeless population now stands at 700,000, one million, or higher. Turner attempted to explain shifts in strategy, but Gillibrand cut in again, stating she did not want to hear further comparisons to the previous term.
“Stop talking about Biden! Talk about your record!”
The back-and-forth continued as Turner pointed to what he described as failed approaches inherited from earlier years. Gillibrand responded that repeated references to the past were unhelpful and prevented the committee from performing its oversight role.
Delays Attributed to Shutdown and Litigation
Turner told the committee the report would already be public if not for an unprecedented government shutdown and ongoing legal challenges facing the department. Gillibrand questioned how litigation could affect a statistical count of people experiencing homelessness and pressed for a clearer timeline.
Turner maintained that the prior four years of record funding had coincided with rising street homelessness, while Gillibrand insisted the focus must remain on measurable outcomes under the current administration. The exchange left the committee without a firm date for the report’s release.
Next Steps for Housing Oversight
The hearing revealed several immediate priorities for the committee:
- Obtaining the overdue point-in-time count to establish current baseline numbers.
- Clarifying how the department plans to demonstrate progress on reducing homelessness.
- Determining whether additional resources or policy adjustments are needed for the 2027 budget cycle.
Until the data arrives, lawmakers and advocates will continue to operate without a complete picture of whether federal efforts are producing the intended results for the hundreds of thousands of Americans without stable housing.
