The Oklahoma Republican was chosen by President Donald Trump earlier this month to replace Kristi Noem , who attracted a flurry of scrutiny from Democrats and Republicans alike for her leadership of the department and her use of taxpayer dollars.
The Senate voted 54-45 to confirm Mullin.
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Two Democrats — Sens.
John Fetterman of Pennsylvania and Martin Heinrich of New Mexico — voted with most Senate Republicans in favor of Mullin's appointment.
Sen.
Rand Paul , R-Ky., who publicly feuded with Mullin at his confirmation hearing, was the lone Republican to vote no.
Funding lapsed for the agency in February, the month after federal immigration agents in Minneapolis killed two U.S.
citizens during an enforcement surge.
Mullin is generally well-regarded by his Senate colleagues on both sides of the aisle, and at his confirmation hearing he signaled he was open to shifting the direction of the agency.
He told the panel he would require immigration agents to obtain judicial warrants to enter private property and said he would like to see ICE become a "transport more than the front line" in immigration enforcement.
"This is going to surprise some people, but I consider Markwayne Mullin a friend.
We have a very honest and constructive working relationship," Heinrich said in a statement on Sunday after supporting Mullin in a procedural vote.
Despite the cross-party camaraderie, many Democrats on the Senate panel pressed Mullin on his close ties to Trump, his hard-line stances on immigration and a trip he said he took abroad while a member of the House that he said was "classified."
Mullin also got in a spat with the committee chair Paul, whom the Trump nominee recently called a "freaking snake." Before earning the DHS nomination, Mullin also reportedly said he could "understand" why Paul's neighbor assaulted the Kentucky Republican in 2017 .
Mullin did not apologize when confronted by Paul in the hearing room.
"I just wonder if someone who applauds violence against their political opponents is the right person to lead an agency that has struggled to accept limits to the proper use of force," Paul said.
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