In July 2025, we saw former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem implement one of the biggest policy changes we’ve seen at the TSA in years. With this, travelers no longer have to take off their shoes at TSA checkpoints.
Obviously travelers are generally in favor of an easier security screening process, but that ignores the other side of the equation — does this policy pose any potential safety concerns? There’s an interesting demand, on that front…
In this post:
Senator Duckworth demands reversal of TSA policy
With Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem having recently been fired (“reassigned” to another “very important job”), Tammy Duckworth, a Democratic Senator from Illinois, is making a demand. She has written to Nguyen McNeil, Senior Official Performing the Duties of Administrator, demanding a reversal of the “reckless” TSA shoe policy.
Let me share the letter in its entirety, since I think it’s pretty interesting:
I demand that you immediately rescind former Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem’s policy forcing the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to allow travelers to keep their shoes on at airport security screening checkpoints despite credible and disturbing reports that covert testing conducted during a performance audit identified serious findings with significant safety and security implications for the traveling public.
TSA’s policy of requiring all passengers to remove their shoes originated with the failed “Shoe Bomber” terrorist attack. This incident occurred on December 22, 2001, when Richard Reid attempted to detonate improvised explosive devices (IEDs) hidden in his shoes during a Miami-bound flight. Had Reid succeeded in detonating the IEDs concealed in his shoes, the explosives likely would have blown a hole in the fuselage and caused the plane to crash, killing all 197 passengers and the flight crew.
Secretary Noem’s decision to implement a shoes on policy on July 8, 2025, likely without meaningful consultation with TSA, was a reckless act. According to reporting by The Wall Street Journal, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) conducted covert testing that found certain TSA Advanced Imaging Technology full body scanners “can’t scan shoes”—leading DHS OIG to determine, “Noem’s policy move had inadvertently created a new security vulnerability in the system.”
According to DHS OIG, when investigators covertly tested the effectiveness of TSA’s airport checkpoint security screening at preventing threat items from being brought onto commercial aircraft, a significant finding was uncovered that warranted Inspector General Joseph Cuffari issuing a Seven-Day Letter on August 26, 2025, to Secretary Noem notifying the Secretary of its time-sensitive significant finding that required swift corrective action. Secretary Noem’s subsequent failure to direct DHS to engage DHS OIG on the substance of the Seven-Day Letter was outrageous, unacceptable and dangerous to the flying public.
Secretary Noem’s shoes on policy remains in effect—despite President Donald Trump publicly announcing the firing of Secretary Noem on March 5, 2026 (effective at the end of March). It is unclear, at best, whether DHS and TSA took any action to address the alarming security findings uncovered during covert field testing of TSA’s effectiveness at preventing dangerous items from being smuggled onto commercial aircraft.
Such inaction violates Federal law, Office of Management and Budget (OMB) guidance and DHS’s own directives requiring that TSA provide a Management Decision with planned corrective actions and target completion dates within 90 days after OIG’s final report is transmitted—in this case by January 30, 2026.
While under oath, you testified to Congress that you had read the DHS OIG final report in November 2025 and that you concurred with the findings and recommendations. Yet, it appears TSA not only failed to submit the Management Decision within 90 days of DHS OIG transmitting its final report but also has, to this day, still failed to comply with a critically important statutory requirement, OMB guidance and DHS directives.
Allowing a potentially catastrophic security deficiency to remain in place for seven months and counting betrays TSA’s mission. At a minimum, TSA’s failure to swiftly implement corrective action warrants the immediate withdrawal of Secretary Noem’s reckless and dangerous policy that increases the risk of a terrorist smuggling a dangerous item onto a flight.
Secretary Noem’s willingness to gamble the American people’s security in an unsuccessful attempt to boost her popularity was, and remains, a stunning failure of leadership—particularly following President Trump’s decision to launch an unconstitutional war of choice against Iran that DHS has determined, “is causing a heightened threat environment in the United States.”
I demand you immediately rescind the dangerous TSA policy that former Secretary Noem recklessly implemented, until the agency implements comprehensive corrective action and the DHS OIG tests and verifies that the updates effectively address the significant findings uncovered during covert field testing.
I’m sure people will have conflicting takes on this demand
It goes without saying that most travelers would probably prefer for the airport security screening process to be as easy as possible, and to not have to take off shoes. If the lack of requiring passengers to take off shoes doesn’t lead to some major event, then everyone would view it as a positive.
Conversely, if this doesn’t end well and this can be used in some form of terrorist plot (or whatever), you can bet that people will say “how could the government allow this, and not protect us?”
Senator Duckworth seemingly makes some good points based on safety concerns that haven’t been fully addressed, and which arose after the policy change.
I think the fundamental issue with deciding on the correct TSA screening process is that we know that the TSA misses a large percentage of prohibited items in their screening. So how can you decide on policies when the entire screening process is reliant on a high level of luck, including the wrong person not being able to sneak through with a prohibited item?
Does allowing all travelers to keep on their shoes increase the potential for a bad actor to sneak something through security? I would imagine so, based on what the research has shown. However, how does that risk compare to the added convenience and efficiency of not having to take off shoes?
I have a hard time imagining that we’re going to see a policy reversal here, though I guess we’ll see…
Bottom line
Senator Tammy Duckworth from Illinois is demanding that the TSA’s mid-2025 policy of not requiring passengers to take off shoes be reversed. She argues that research has shown that this poses a risk to our aviation ecosystem, but seemingly believes that former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem didn’t care. However, with her being fired, Duckworth is making another appeal.
What do you make of this request regarding the TSA’s shoe policy?
Duckworth doesn't have feet, I believe
She lost them serving her country in the folly in Iraq. I'm sure she would prefer to deal with having to remove her shoes at a TSA checkpoint than dealing with crutches and wheelchairs.
Well, Senator, we should also ban bags, jackets, and pockets because we know the TSA misses a large fraction of banned items. In fact, we should switch to an entire nudist model for air transport, where no clothing at all is allowed from the TSA checkpoint until your outside of baggage claim.
/s, in case it wasn't obvious.
Next time they will say: Everyone strips at checkpoint for security reasons.
The current generation of personal screening systems can adequately detect hidden items. Update the equipment to the current generation. It's not tough.
"...misfortunes or Kristie’s departure...." LOL
Pipe down Duckworth. The Democrats have already done enough damage to our freedoms. From Covid lockdowns to forcing DEI initiatives, youre party is a joke.
LOLOLOLOLOLOL!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!
When do you turn 14?
TRAVELEILLY NEEDS TO GET OUT OF HERE!!!
Clearly, his 14th birthday is far in the future.
I say just remove the entire TSA. TSA is entirely ineffective and staffed by stupid people.
True. Why does Republicans and some Democrats that need to have an overly inflated and bloated agency ruining your life??? And funding them too????
M’am we all know it’s theater and TSA is shit at covert tests. Go over to your TSA escort and have a nice day.
(I can’t be the only one howling that DHS was stupid enough not to classify such a study?)
Maybe this ah Senator, should concern himself with waste, fraud, and abuse, protecting the American people from Iran nuclear tyranny, among many other useful things, and let the -professionals at TSA- who went unpaid for months, do their jobs, instead of showboating for any minor attention this so called Senator is trying to get by capitalizing upon the misfortunes or Kristie’s departure.
Maybe you should figure out that this senator is a she.
Kristie? Is that you, Corey?
@KllmaBXsst,
To add, she was a commissioned officer in the US Army, she is a double leg amputee after her Blackhawk helicopter she was flying was shot down in Iraq. Confined to a wheelchair.
So go take your sanctimonious BS and shove it up your @ss.
That may be true, but it doesn't mean that she's an expert on all things security. Or that she knows anything about the latest screening systems. However, she is a hyper partisan Democrat who pulls no punches when going after her political opponents. That's what's happening here.
She may be a wounded veteran and that is to be respected and honored. But it doesn't make her a saint. She is not.
"...misfortunes or Kristie’s departure...." LOL
When we make a thousand people line up so that they are easy targets for a terrorist firing squad with AK-47s, why are we making such a fuss about shoes?
With all due respect to Senator Tammy Duckworth (who has been a credit to my home state of IL), I disagree. There has been no added security benefit of requiring travelers to remove shoes. Even more evident is that many other countries with robust airport security rules do not require this of their passengers either.
I shed no tears for Kristi Noem, and hate what she and ICE have done to this country, but sometimes a broken clock can be right.
I'd assume there's some government contractor out there building a TSA luggage screening AI use case that should flag the prohibited items a human missed.
Not really related but would be very curious to hear your thoughts on how AI may affect travel and your business. Airlines will get better at pricing and optimizing points for their benefit, sweet spots will likely disappear, mistake fares will be caught, chatgpt will quickly tell you why you...
I'd assume there's some government contractor out there building a TSA luggage screening AI use case that should flag the prohibited items a human missed.
Not really related but would be very curious to hear your thoughts on how AI may affect travel and your business. Airlines will get better at pricing and optimizing points for their benefit, sweet spots will likely disappear, mistake fares will be caught, chatgpt will quickly tell you why you should fly JAL over AA to Japan with pictures and mini reviews, SEO and marketing revenue less reliable if bots are searching instead of humans googling, etc.
(Horrible joke incoming)
Well, sure, Senator Duckworth will never have to take *her* shoes off…
(Sorry! Sorry! Tip your server!)
It’s admirable what Senator Duckworth sacrificed. Seriously, look into her personal story - it’s an inspiration. But as my Senator, she leaves a LOT lacking. I’ve never voted for her in a primary and typically throw away a third party vote in the general to express my dissatisfaction with her extreme natsec friendly views.
Like a ticking clock that’s always wrong, you can always expect her to oppose civil liberties and cite national security...
It’s admirable what Senator Duckworth sacrificed. Seriously, look into her personal story - it’s an inspiration. But as my Senator, she leaves a LOT lacking. I’ve never voted for her in a primary and typically throw away a third party vote in the general to express my dissatisfaction with her extreme natsec friendly views.
Like a ticking clock that’s always wrong, you can always expect her to oppose civil liberties and cite national security as a reason. If the so-called deep state exists, Tammy Duckworth is the deep state’s number one defender and ally. This puffed up letter is entirely within character for her and yet she’s basically a United States Senator for as long as she wants to be.
She needs to retire from public affairs to give herself a mental recovery from the trauma which she had never recovered from the wounds.
Of the airports I've been in through Europe I don't recall ever taking my shoes off, and planes aren't just falling out of the skies on the regular there. Still, with all the technology we have today it would seem we could find a way to scan without having to remove them. Those full body scanners couldn't catch anything? Other irony for me is I have TSA precheck so in theory i don't have to...
Of the airports I've been in through Europe I don't recall ever taking my shoes off, and planes aren't just falling out of the skies on the regular there. Still, with all the technology we have today it would seem we could find a way to scan without having to remove them. Those full body scanners couldn't catch anything? Other irony for me is I have TSA precheck so in theory i don't have to take off my shoes but I have two pairs that almost always set off the detector when I walk through. Insults of politicians aside, it's a fair question
ALL my dress shoes have steel shanks in them, so they *always* set off the metal detectors. My favorite part of the TSA PreCheck® theatre is when they tell me I can keep my shoes on, I still take them off, they scream at me to keep them on (which I do), and then I beep anyway.
Good times.
Duckworth is a clown. This will never happen.
What makes Duckworth a clown?
The sheer inanity of her letter.
Both are total morons but Duckworth goes into the "R" area. Like most politician totally useless.
Taking shoes off makes decurity line stink.