Trump’s second-term Cabinet started with more women than any recent Republican one. For thirteen months nobody left. Then in eleven weeks four women were gone, and every vacated seat passed to a man, three of them in an acting capacity, several of them Trump’s personal allies. This table shows the one-way swap.
| Departed (woman) | Role | Replacement (man) | Tie to Trump |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kristi Noem | Homeland Security | Markwayne Mullin | Loyal sitting US senator |
| Pam Bondi | Attorney General | Todd Blanche (acting) | Trump’s former personal attorney |
| Lori Chavez-DeRemer | Labor | Keith Sonderling (acting) | Her own deputy |
| Tulsi Gabbard | Director of National Intelligence | Aaron Lukas (acting) | Principal deputy |
And this table shows the rule: women left over performance or conduct problems, while men with same or worse problems stayed.
| Official | Sex | Liability | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kristi Noem | F | Minneapolis enforcement deaths, congressional grilling | Fired |
| Pam Bondi | F | Epstein files, failed prosecutions of Trump’s enemies | Fired |
| Lori Chavez-DeRemer | F | Fraud and misconduct investigation | Resigned under pressure |
| Tulsi Gabbard | F | CIA feud, prior ouster pressure | Resigned |
| Pete Hegseth | M | Signalgate, conduct allegations, Iran war grilling | Retained |
| Kash Patel | M | Firing speculation | Retained |
| Howard Lutnick | M | Firing speculation | Retained |
Simple analysis shows the shift was never about misconduct. Loyalty tests were applied to remove women from high-ranking roles, yet waived for men.