Public approval of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has jumped sharply in the past year, making it the only major federal agency to show a significant gain in Gallup’s latest annual governance survey—as ratings for most other agencies have fallen to record lows.
By contrast, ratings for six other prominent agencies—including the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the CIA, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the IRS—dropped to their lowest or near-lowest levels in Gallup’s multi-year trend.
FEMA’s positive score plunged from 46 percent to 26 percent, the steepest decline of any agency, followed by the CIA with a 10-point drop and the CDC with a 9-point drop.
Gallup found that partisan divisions were widest for DHS. While 73 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents gave the department favorable marks, only 14 percent of Democrats did—an almost 60-point gap.
“These partisan swings suggest both politics and performance drive confidence in government,” Megan Brenan, senior editor at Gallup, said.
The Trump administration has relied on DHS, together with the Pentagon, to carry out its efforts to curb illegal immigration and other public safety initiatives, including dispatching the National Guard to high-crime cities.
Majorities of Republicans now rate DHS, the Department of War (formally the Department of Defense), and the FBI positively, whereas no agency earned majority-level support from Republicans a year ago.
Border Arrests at Historic Low
The jump in DHS approval comes as the agency touts record-low apprehensions of illegal immigrants at the U.S.–Mexico border.The 2025 fiscal year ran from Oct. 1, 2024, through Sept. 30, 2025. DHS noted that about 72 percent of the arrests occurred in the final months of the Biden administration. Arrests, which had already dropped after then-President Joe Biden’s June 2024 asylum restrictions, fell further once the Trump administration “virtually eliminated asylum access and dispatched thousands of military troops to the border,” the department said.
DHS also said that September was the fifth consecutive month with zero releases by Border Patrol, compared with thousands of releases during the previous administration.





