On a winter night last year, shortly after Donald Trump was sworn into office, senior officials at the Department of Homeland Security assembled discreetly at a private home in Washington, D.C., to discuss what they saw as a gathering crisis inside the agency: the relationship between their new boss, Kristi Noem, and Corey Lewandowski, her adviser, enforcer, and rumored boyfriend. The officials were under enormous pressure. Trump had recaptured the presidency amid a popular backlash against illegal immigration, and had promised a shock-and-awe program of mass deportations once he returned to power. Now DHS'conceived after 9/11 to protect the country from terrorist attacks'was being ordered to shift its focus and resources toward delivering on the president's campaign pledge. This project, already controversial and logistically fraught, was being complicated by Lewandowski'a menacing, omnipresent operator who had no experience in immigration enforcement, but who was nonetheless...
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